Wellyes, except they are recommending she eat foods such as Weetabix, jacket potatoes, tomatoes with pasta......... 800 calories per day, but no recognition of low carbohydrate.
Hi all
Firstly I'm in Spain avoiding the TV so haven't seen what was shown tonight BUT...the only conversation I had with Tina around both weetabix and jacket potato was about how high GI they are and the carb content (we discussed Tina's large JP as having 19 teaspoons of sugar equivalent carbs), with suggested alternatives. Always the main focus is on carb portions though as GI has a limited additional effect. Please understand this was 6 hours of filming condensed into probably about 2 minutes airtime with no idea what would be shown!
The 'Newcastle' diet is both low calorie at about 720kcal/d in the original studies and 800-900 in the current study (DiRECT, outcomes to be announced 5 Dec). It is also by definition low carb because it is under 130g CHO per day from the shakes and veg. After extensive discussion about various dietary options Tina chose a food-based low calorie and low carb diet. On catch up she was eating around 1000kcal and 100g carbs per day. The main point to focus on if aiming to reverse diabetes is to lose enough weight to remove excess fat from liver and pancreas, for someone 100kg about 15kg weight loss is typically required. Low carb is one approach that can achieve this - if it suits you. Other weight loss diets suit other people and work just as well for remission as long as weight loss is sustainable long term. If you lose weight and still have T2DM (e.g. due to having diabetes for a long time) then certainly low carb can have benefits in managing glycaemia. With a true reversal you can eat carbs and your pancreas should be able to cope, having recovered its ability to respond to a carb load more effectively. There is a difference.
Both myself and Tina hoped that the main message that would come across is that you don't just have to take meds for type 2 there is so much power in diet and lifestyle change, and finding the right approach for you is key.
Best wishes to all
Ali Barnes
@alimac73 thank you for this clarification. It is great that recently the Newcastle Diet protocol has become media worthy. Many on this site are frustrated that low carb high fat is almost a swear word for a viable option. I noticed in the program that a portion where the Eatwell plate was on show when Tina was being talked to; I feel confident enough to say that for most Type 2's this is a disaster. If you were to research this site (the biggest I believe internationally) you will see that low carb high fat has amazing success.Hi all
Firstly I'm in Spain avoiding the TV so haven't seen what was shown tonight BUT...the only conversation I had with Tina around both weetabix and jacket potato was about how high GI they are and the carb content (we discussed Tina's large JP as having 19 teaspoons of sugar equivalent carbs), with suggested alternatives. Always the main focus is on carb portions though as GI has a limited additional effect. Please understand this was 6 hours of filming condensed into probably about 2 minutes airtime with no idea what would be shown!
The 'Newcastle' diet is both low calorie at about 720kcal/d in the original studies and 800-900 in the current study (DiRECT, outcomes to be announced 5 Dec). It is also by definition low carb because it is under 130g CHO per day from the shakes and veg. After extensive discussion about various dietary options Tina chose a food-based low calorie and low carb diet. On catch up she was eating around 1000kcal and 100g carbs per day. The main point to focus on if aiming to reverse diabetes is to lose enough weight to remove excess fat from liver and pancreas, for someone 100kg about 15kg weight loss is typically required. Low carb is one approach that can achieve this - if it suits you. Other weight loss diets suit other people and work just as well for remission as long as weight loss is sustainable long term. If you lose weight and still have T2DM (e.g. due to having diabetes for a long time) then certainly low carb can have benefits in managing glycaemia. With a true reversal you can eat carbs and your pancreas should be able to cope, having recovered its ability to respond to a carb load more effectively. There is a difference.
Both myself and Tina hoped that the main message that would come across is that you don't just have to take meds for type 2 there is so much power in diet and lifestyle change, and finding the right approach for you is key.
Best wishes to all
Ali Barnes
Yes it's Dr Chatterjee. He has a Facebook page too Good to follow and innovative in his way of thinking. XI like the 'doctor in the house' result best, a few months back. He recommended low carb. Her hba1c improved and daughter was fighting prediabetes due to shift work and poor diet.
It hit a cord!
Just as there is a large range for low carb which appears to be from 10 g - 100 g or 20 g - 130 g I have seen; the same applies to high fat. I know some book authors talk about circa 70% high fat, the thought makes me feel queasy. I don't measure I just put either 2 or 3 dollops of say full fat Greek yogurt on my berries and nuts, I eat a lot of coconut about a third a day, so again I don't measure. Bottom line it is about not being hungry and replacing the energy value of carbs with fat.For me the problem with lchr is the hf part - i makes me nauseous and leads to weight gain
I do think the LC part is a no brainer for people with T2 diabetes and think much more structured scientific (not anecdotal n=1 type observations) research into the effects of carb restriction, possibly stratified by fat intake although that would need a v large sample size to have any scientific validity, on metabolic markers is much needed and long overdue
Im similar to you - I use full fat butter, cheese, eggs, yogurt and cream as necessary and in preference to any low fat alternatives. Recipies in sites like diet doctor, tho very tasty, are, in my experience, way too big (about double the portion size I can handle), make me heave if I follow them ( even at half portion size) for more than a few days and cause weight gainJust as there is a large range for low carb which appears to be from 10 g - 100 g or 20 g - 130 g I have seen; the same applies to high fat. I know some book authors talk about circa 70% high fat, the thought makes me feel queasy. I don't measure I just put either 2 or 3 dollops of say full fat Greek yogurt on my berries and nuts, I eat a lot of coconut about a third a day, so again I don't measure. Bottom line it is about not being hungry and replacing the energy value of carbs with fat.
Similar to me although you may not believe it.. I don't chug down glasses of melted butter (well not very often) but the whole point of the ketogenic diet is fat to "satiety".. if you are feeling queasy that sounds like you have eaten more than to satiety? Eat less and save some for tomorrow. Its more about letting your body choose when it has had enough rather than forcing a meal down.Im similar to you - I use full fat butter, cheese, eggs, yogurt and cream as necessary and in preference to any low fat alternatives. Recipies in sites like diet doctor, tho very tasty, are, in my experience, way too big (about double the portion size I can handle), make me heave if I follow them ( even at half portion size) for more than a few days and cause weight gain
Similar to me although you may not believe it.. I don't chug down glasses of melted butter (well not very often) but the whole point of the ketogenic diet is fat to "satiety".. if you are feeling queasy that sounds like you have eaten more than to satiety? Eat less and save some for tomorrow. Its more about letting your body choose when it has had enough rather than forcing a meal down.
It is quite possible to run an LC diet without going full frontal keto, in which case the carbs can be a bit higher, and you do not need to pile on the fat because there is nothing to compensate for. The bgl can still drop nicely but the weight may not, Also it is not tackling the midriff fat that is becoming associated with Insulin Resistance. But a bit of intermittent fasting could work alongside the LC diet.Just as there is a large range for low carb which appears to be from 10 g - 100 g or 20 g - 130 g I have seen; the same applies to high fat. I know some book authors talk about circa 70% high fat, the thought makes me feel queasy. I don't measure I just put either 2 or 3 dollops of say full fat Greek yogurt on my berries and nuts, I eat a lot of coconut about a third a day, so again I don't measure. Bottom line it is about not being hungry and replacing the energy value of carbs with fat.
I dont doubt what you say but I wouldnt see either of us in those terms necessarily following lchf as the term is often used on this siteSimilar to me although you may not believe it.. I don't chug down glasses of melted butter (well not very often) but the whole point of the ketogenic diet is fat to "satiety".. if you are feeling queasy that sounds like you have eaten more than to satiety? Eat less and save some for tomorrow. Its more about letting your body choose when it has had enough rather than forcing a meal down.
But when newly diagnosed and wishing to reduce high blood sugar levels quickly that is probably the best advice. Cut out as many carbs as possible.. if you want to reintroduce some later then try it. Hopefully you will have had such good results by cutting out carbs then you won't want to re-introduce and you will in the meantime re-educated your palate to not seek sugar or sweet things. When you first start out you don't need to track macros and certainly in my case I didn't need to watch calories for the weight to fall off me. Yes I have stalled a couple of times but a bit of fasting has helped through those and I'm now nearing target weight. (or at least where my mind tells me I want to be although my body is maybe saying something else).The problem I have is the way people are 'told' that what they need to do is follow lchf and then told (incorrectly) that low carb means under 20-30g carbs ( ie ketogenic) rather than the more accurate level of under 100-130g and are also dircted to ketogenic or the diet doctor site for further advice / recipes etc
Again thet doesnt imply high fatBut when newly diagnosed and wishing to reduce high blood sugar levels quickly that is probably the best advice. Cut out as many carbs as possible.. if you want to reintroduce some later then try it. Hopefully you will have had such good results by cutting out carbs then you won't want to re-introduce and you will in the meantime re-educated your palate to not seek sugar or sweet things. When you first start out you don't need to track macros and certainly in my case I didn't need to watch calories for the weight to fall off me. Yes I have stalled a couple of times but a bit of fasting has helped through those and I'm now nearing target weight. (or at least where my mind tells me I want to be although my body is maybe saying something else).
We are coming from v different positions