I think the fact I've relocated helped, you know, moving furniture and going a lot of times to look beds and kitchens at Ikea and furniture factories helpet to make physical activity.Hello Mike, I am from Turin as well and I have been type 1 for some thirty years now (got diagnosed at 20, now I am 52). Welcome to the forum and first of all let me congratulate you on your weight loss, 17 kg is a great achievement, so: be proud!
Let me explain better my idea about it. I've studied computer science engineering and got the "chartered engineering" certification, so I think I suppose that I have a sufficient reading comphrension of technical material and I'm able to find books in the library or documents on internet on given subjects.As for the new mayor, well… personally I don't care much for public promotion of healthier lifestyles, unless the program is really comprehensive and wide-ranging, you know: promoting a single diet is rarely of any use, as different people thrive with different diets (plus, I don't like public authorities patronizing me and telling me how I should 'behave', no matter how good their intentions. Living with diabetes does NOT mean we are under anybody's guardianship, be it the mayor or healthcare professionals or whoever).
I was obese, I've had bad triglicerids and cholesterol levels, and familiarity on this. My GP never warned me of the risks to getting diabetes having a metabolic syndrome, and that metabolic syndrome is not a thing you control only with a pill.Now let me tell something about your self-blaming for your past eating habits. It's all very well that you have changed your diet to suit your needs and that you feel comfortable with the change. But please do not assume that 'you brought diabetes on yourself', for this is gross oversimplification. Lots of people eat too much or eats unwisely, and yet they don't ever get T2 diabetes. A lot of people are either very overweight or obese, yet they are not T2 and never will be.
I think the fact I've relocated helped, you know, moving furniture and going a lot of times to look beds and kitchens at Ikea and furniture factories helpet to make physical activity.
Let me explain better my idea about it. I've studied computer science engineering and got the "chartered engineering" certification, so I think I suppose that I have a sufficient reading comphrension of technical material and I'm able to find books in the library or documents on internet on given subjects.
When I was diagnosed with diabetes, I've approached the matter like a new engineering argument. Going in the library, using the OPAC system to find the books on the arguments, borrowing them, photocopying the more important pages and highlighting an making notes on the copied and put them in a binder, going on internet and find other documentation. I've also found some local diabetics association.
First of all I've started the research AFTER the diabetologist diagnosis. I'll return to this later, but if I were warned of the risks earlier I surely changed my lifestyle earlier.
If people aren't naturally curious like me and have been forged to swallow books, I find difficult that they'll find informations on healthy lifestyles and diet, being bombarded by ads of junk foods, and the abundance of bad foods in the supermarkets. The proposed diet by the mass media are normally snake oil fads and are associated at commercial operations that try to sell costly items and promising easy solutions to weight problems.
I was obese, I've had bad triglicerids and cholesterol levels, and familiarity on this. My GP never warned me of the risks to getting diabetes having a metabolic syndrome, and that metabolic syndrome is not a thing you control only with a pill.
I was at risk - I found reading after the diagnosis - the professional that should have warned me never did. Actually he minimized the fact the blood exams I've done when donating blood were borderline, as in (as in 99 mg/dl). Maybe sending me to the dietologist and saying clearly that I should lose weight will have helped me to delay the diabetes insurgency from metabolic syndrome.
Yes, I've changed my GP: i lost the trust on him, of course, but now my health problems are bigger...
Thank you very much, MikeTurin! I see they are mostly about T2, which is reasonably your focus; they'll be useful to help me learn something more about T2, though the focus for my project is T1 (being somewhat of a rarer condition, it is also under-represented in literature). As I expected, the title about actually living with the condition is by foreign authors. The last title you quote was highly praised by my GP, by the way (he specialized as an endo so I guess is quite reliable), who I must say is not easy to please in such matters.This is the most interesting I've found:
Diabete : guida pratica per vivere bene / Rosemary Walker, Jill Rodgers ; [traduzione di Giuliana Lomazzi]
Milano : Tecniche Nuove, c2005 (stampa 2006)
224 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN: 8848118054
Other titles:
Diabete : il grande libro delle ricette : [cosa mangiare e cosa cucinare in caso di diabete tipo 2! / [Fiona Hunter e Heather Whinney!
Milano : Tecniche Nuove, 2011
256 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN: 9788848126045
EAN: 9788848126045
Data:2011
Dieta per il diabete / Eliana Giuratrabocchetti
Milano : Red!, 2011
92 p. : ill. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9788857303314
EAN: 9788857303314
Data:2011
Il diabete di tipo 2 : tutte le risposte a portata di mano / Charles Fox, Anne Kilvert ; versione italiana a cura di Edoardo Mannucci e Caterina Lamanna
Chieri (To) : Ercules, 2012
XV, 329 p. : ill. ; 21 cm
EAN: 9788884790217
Data:2012
A tavola con il diabete / Barbara Asprea, Giuseppe Capano, Simona Salò ; con l'approvazione della Fand, Associazione italiana diabetici
2. ed
Milano : Tecniche nuove, 2009
Thank you very much MikeTurin, I'll go
VI, 120 p. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9788848124508
EAN: 9788848124508
Data:2009
This one is more on good eating
La cucina del cuore : diabete e ipertensione : 120 ricette per non perdere il buon umore e il gusto della buona cucina / Roberto Ferrari, Claudia Florio
Firenze [etc.] : Giunti Demetra, 2011
239 p. : in gran parte ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN: 9788844038397
EAN: 9788844038397
Data:2011
This is way more technical, but interesting anyway:
Elementi di diabetologia per il medico di medicina generale / a cura di Sandro Girotto ... [et al.]
Torino : Edizioni Medio scientifiche, 2014
277 p. : ill. ; 19 cm
EAN: 9788871103396
Data:2014
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