DavidGrahamJones
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Could someone please help me understand why the healthcare professionals don't recommend it when I read on here how the people on a low carb diet find it helpful.
It is very simple, we have diabetes and most health care professionals do not. As a type II I progressed from Metformin to Metformin and Gliclazide, then to Metformin, Gliclazide and Januvia and the next step that I was discussing with my GP, believing that it was a progressive disease after all, was insulin.
I lowered my carbs after 17 years of being told not to, and because I wanted to shed a few pounds, my carbs accounted for 1/3 of my calories as recommended by the so called Health Care Professionals, about 700 calories.
I did lose weight, my BG dropped, my total cholesterol dropped and I gave up taking Gliclazide, Januvia, and Atorvastatin because I didn't need them. I'm not a medic but in my books that's a "no brainer". Eat carbs and take meds with all the side effects or don't eat the carbs. You'll have to ask the healthcare professionals why they don't recommend low carb, except for mine, they know that in my case I can be trusted to adhere to a low carb regime and will not be going back to recommended amounts of carbs any time soon.