Hi Jason.
A healthy diet for people with a healthy pancreas is one thing and a healthy diet for those whose pancreas is no longer properly functioning is something entirely different. They can NOT be the same diet! :shock:
Basically as a T2 your pancreas is no longer able to cope with glucose in the way it was designed to do so it naturally follows that if you eat the healthy diet advocated by the NHS which includes all the starchy carbs you will not function as well or perhaps feel ill; even if on meds since they can only do just so much to help you.
I don’t see how it is possible that the two ways of tackling T2, which you mention, will ultimately lead to the same destination since they are so radically different. The NHS ‘healthy diet’ is akin to ignoring the condition or even trying to put out a fire by pouring on petrol. :roll:
In all fairness you do have to have some sympathy for the health professionals as they are so often dealing with people who are almost impossible to help. There are always people who do not want to know about anything and just want the medication, others who cannot control their cravings and just shut their minds to the consequences and then there are the anomalies who want to take control of their condition. For some it ultimately proves impossible to take control without the assistance of medication and some people may even ‘fall off’ as they become combat weary.
My own thoughts on this are that the NHS have fallen into the way of just treating everyone in the same way as it is simpler and less time consuming. It takes time to know how people are going to react given what a shock the diagnosis can be and time is something in very short supply. The problem is that the patients are not often given the choice and the HCPs often seem to panic when the patient does not ‘conform’.
Which course to steer MUST be entirely up to the individual since the consequences also have to be borne by that same individual. Taking control of your own condition is not the easy way out but it is safer for your long term health. The best thing you can do is experiment to see what works for you because, as has been said so often, ‘we are all different’.
Your body, your health, your diabetes and your life! Your choice!