lucylocket61 said:I think that 130g is a good starting figure. I worked out that I used to be eating 200g at least every day before learning about carbsand often much more (I love Maltesers)
So it was a good figure to aim for, and it is easier to go down than up. I decreased my carbs by 10-20g a week until I felt comfortable and my meter reading were under 8 after eating. So I have sort of stabilised on around 80g a day now to achieve control.
As long as people understand that 130g is only a starting average figure and they can tailor it down to their own best level for them, whatever that is, I think it is a good, helpful figure. Especially as I am a woman who is 5'3" tall so need fewer carbs anyway.
As a newbie, it helps to have something to work on, both with bs level targets and carb targets.
lucylocket61 said:I think that 130g is a good starting figure. ...
NHS Diet Advice for Diabetes
In the UK, current 2012 NHS diabetes diet advice is that there is no special diet for people with diabetes.
Many people with diabetes focus on the carbohydrate content of their meals and prefer a low-carb diet for tight blood glucose level control.
The NHS (and Diabetes UK) recommend a healthy, balanced diet that is low in fat, sugar and salt and contain a high level of fresh fruit and vegetables.
NHS dieticians' advice
Earlier this year, top NHS dieticians were reported as providing the following tips for people with diabetes.
Together, these can be said to sum up the NHS approach to controlling type 2 diabetes with diet.
Eat plenty of starchy carbohydrates
Eat carbohydrate foods with a low GI
Avoid high GI foods, especially between meals
Eat regular meals and healthy snacks
Don’t miss breakfast
Don’t skip meals
Avoid all unhealthy/hydrogenated fats
Choose low-fat dairy products
Check food labels
Choose lean meat and remove fat and skin
Avoid fried and fast food, and baked goods
Keep hydrated and avoid binge-drinking
Base meals upon starchy carbohydrate
The NHS advises people, including those with diabetes, to base meals around food with starchy carbohydrate such as:
Potatoes
Cereals
Pasta
Rice
Bread
The diet consists of meat, fish, shellfish, eggs, vegetables, legumes and vegetable proteins and fats from olive oil and butter. The diet includes less sugar, bread, cereals, potatoes, root vegetables and rice than a traditional diabetes diet.
The low carb, high fat diet (LCHF diet) has developed a strong following in Scandinavia, having originated in Sweden.
The story goes that Swedish GP Dr Annika Dahlqvist was subject to an investigation after being reported for recommending a low carb, high fat diet to her patients.
The investigation though cleared Dr Dahlqvist of wrong doing based on their findings that her methods were scientifically sound.
What is the low carb, high fat diet?
As the name suggests, the diet suggests eating high fat and low carbohydrate foods.
The LCHF diet is different to such diets as the Atkins diet as there are no ‘stages’ to work through, so the diet can be followed indefinitely.
lucylocket61 said:so do you think the starting figure should be lower - perhaps 100g Defren? not arguing or disagreeing, I'm searching for the right info to give anyone newly diagnose I come across, who may not have web access or before they come here.
Eat plenty of starchy carbohydrates
Eat carbohydrate foods with a low GI
Avoid high GI foods, especially between meals
Eat regular meals and healthy snacks
Don’t miss breakfast
Don’t skip meals
Avoid all unhealthy/hydrogenated fats
Choose low-fat dairy products
Check food labels
Choose lean meat and remove fat and skin
Avoid fried and fast food, and baked goods
Keep hydrated and avoid binge-drinking
Base meals upon starchy carbohydrate
The NHS advises people, including those with diabetes, to base meals around food with starchy carbohydrate such as:
Potatoes
Cereals
Pasta
Rice
Bread
meat, fish, shellfish, eggs, vegetables, legumes and vegetable proteins and fats from olive oil and butter. The diet includes less sugar, bread, cereals, potatoes, root vegetables and rice than a traditional diabetes diet.
Defren said:Why not tell diabetics they MUST reduce their carb intake? Sigh!
Defren said:Why not tell diabetics they MUST reduce their carb intake? Sigh!
Dillinger said:This is an example of the cognitive dissonance; the NHS believes strongly that people should have a low fat diet; that means you have to eat more carbohydrate and protein. Diabetics in particular have a greater propensity to heart disease and elevated blood pressure to they should in particular eat less fat (to help their hearts) and less protein (to protect their kidneys from high blood pressure) so that means eating carbohydrate. Which should make everything fine.
(snip)
I suppose one reason why blood testing is frowned upon is that it will constantly expose the NHS approach as nonsense, and it's expensive (in the short term), so you can pour oil on the water and safe money by just getting everyone to stop doing it, shut up and eat your high fibre granary bread with low fat spread and the problem will go away. That is until the diabetic you are treating dies, or goes blind, suffers kidney failure or loses a limb or two, but at least no one was rocking the boat...
borofergie said:Dillinger said it best
Dillinger said:This is an example of the cognitive dissonance;
A general view of cognitive dissonance is when one is biased towards a certain decision even though other factors, such as environmental factors, favour another alternative.
xyzzy said:Defren said:Why not tell diabetics they MUST reduce their carb intake? Sigh!
Because, and this maybe shocking news. They don't necessarily all need to!
Think of it this way. Me, you, Lucy, whoever... are T2's with some insulin function left and when we do the (V)Low(er) carb thing and get good results we are doing something new(ish). Something that for example hasn't been taken into account with the mortality / complications stats so imo they are pretty useless as they only tell you the rates of the unlucky T2's who haven't found this new way. I'm not sure if Sweden has published updated data as they did only swap to the new way officiallly in 2011.
But don't forget all the other diabetics out there. For example T1's and insulin dependent T2's can inject to cover carbs so they can quite happily adopt a different type of healthy diet be it low carb based, low GI based or whatever based. The key feature I would say is the broad term "healthy". So to simplify things horribly as an insulin using diabetic you are looking for a healthy diet that keeps you at a nice healthy weight and allows you to get excellent control of your BG's.
Now the T1's and LADA's out there on this forum have their own debates about "healthy" and carbs etc just like we T2's do but to me its a subtly different argument which I wish some would see.
I get angry sometimes when insulin using diabetics tell me what the best diet choice is for people like me who wish to diet control or diet + Metformin only. Why do they think they know what's best for me? I would never presume to tell a T1 what is a good diet in anything but the broadest outlines. If I did I would soon know about it! Sometimes I really do feel I'm being patronised for being T2.
It's that key difference that I feel my Swedish friend Dr Dahlqvist recognised and went through the Swedish courts to prove.
She says as a bog standard T2 you do what we do Defren, you concentrate on the carbs and within that framework you can then go low GI as a healthy option but carbs override GI.
I'll say it again this is a DOCTOR who defended herself through the court system of the worlds leading state health system, won her argument and now that health system adopts her recommendations. Who am I or any other non expert to argue against that. I just followed her advice and now after just 16 weeks have the blood sugar levels of a healthy non diabetic and am 3 stone lighter and very happy.
I am now determined very loudly and for as long as it takes to tell other T2's who find themselves in my position that the Swedish way is an option open to them all.
borofergie said:Defren said:Why not tell diabetics they MUST reduce their carb intake? Sigh!
The answer is cognitive dissonance; the NHS adheres to a dogmatic belief in the low-fat diet, which means that they cannot recommend a low-carb diet (which by it's nature is usually high in fat), not matter what the perceived benefits might be.
Dillinger said it best (edited from what I think that this is the single best post that I've read in a year on DCUK):
Dillinger said:This is an example of the cognitive dissonance; the NHS believes strongly that people should have a low fat diet; that means you have to eat more carbohydrate and protein. Diabetics in particular have a greater propensity to heart disease and elevated blood pressure to they should in particular eat less fat (to help their hearts) and less protein (to protect their kidneys from high blood pressure) so that means eating carbohydrate. Which should make everything fine.
(snip)
I suppose one reason why blood testing is frowned upon is that it will constantly expose the NHS approach as nonsense, and it's expensive (in the short term), so you can pour oil on the water and safe money by just getting everyone to stop doing it, shut up and eat your high fibre granary bread with low fat spread and the problem will go away. That is until the diabetic you are treating dies, or goes blind, suffers kidney failure or loses a limb or two, but at least no one was rocking the boat...
I stronly recommend that you read the whole thing if you have time:
viewtopic.php?f=25&t=26856&p=248082&hilit=dissonance#p248082
lucylocket61 said:so are people thinking of replacing or changing the post that Daisy1 puts up for newbies, in the light of new evidence?
lucylocket61 said:so are people thinking of replacing or changing the post that Daisy1 puts up for newbies, in the light of new evidence?
I still think that's a valid position to promote to a new person as they have to be pointed in a direction away from "starchy carbs" but still feel confident when they read the new advice that its coming from a reliable and trustworthy source.
lucylocket61 said:so are people thinking of replacing or changing the post that Daisy1 puts up for newbies, in the light of new evidence?
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