mo1905
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Good initial post which is now a "copy and paste" contest lol ! Too much testosterone !
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IanD said:Should we expect professional peer challenges? When the objectives, methods & conclusions are published & reasonable, what is there to challenge?
IanD said:I am not vox pops which is essentially an uninformed public opinion. I am a professional scientist (B.Sc. Hull, 1961, & have worked as a professional scientist all my life. I've been diagnosed diabetic for 12 years, so I have rather more than your 4 months experience.
mo1905 said:Good initial post which is now a "copy and paste" contest lol ! Too much testosterone !
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Although low carbohydrate diets may appear to be effective over the short-term on weight loss in non diabetic individuals, our review indicates that differences on weight, A1C and lipid profiles changes over the long-term comparing a low carbohydrate diet with a low fat diet, a usual care diet or a low glycemic index diet were not consistent and conclusive. Therefore, further investigation on the long-term effects over cardiovascular outcomes and safety in subjects with type 2 diabetes is needed.
phoenix said:Lastly a review paper on diets and diabetes that reviews several diets and has a title that perhaps says it all
Is there an optimal diet for patients with type 2 diabetes?
Yes, the one that works for them!
Sorry Mo, but the initial post made a scary point that cause some low-carbers to question the long-term safety of their diet.mo1905 said:Good initial post which is now a "copy and paste" contest lol ! Too much testosterone !
That study was not concerned with diabetics. My posts were specifically concerned with diabetics, including quotations from major & recent studies by Diabetes UK. While they still question the long term safety of low carb, it is ONLY because they think there might be problems, even though NONE have been reported in the reports they cited.A new study recently out suggests that long term low carb diets are far from safe and are actually shown to increase all causes of mortality.
Obviously true, but equally obviously unhelpful. How long do we have to follow the NHS/DUK starchy carb diet before realising that the disease has progressed, & the diet did not work? For me, 7 1/2 years to become critical, with debilitation leg muscle pain, but some effects were apparent years before.Phoenix:
Lastly a review paper on diets and diabetes that reviews several diets and has a title that perhaps says it all
Is there an optimal diet for patients with type 2 diabetes?
Yes, the one that works for them!
Yorksman said:jddukes said:Yorksman said:If there were any professional peer challenges, they'd be listed. Where are these challenges? All I have seen are some vox pops published on web forum.
Strip down medicine to its basic elements and you can usually safely conclude that if enough people report a similar finding than this could be considered the "norm." Many people here, and elsewhere have been low-carbing and doing it for years with only improvements to their health. This seems far from random noise, far from being at the tail-end of the bell-shaped curve, but actually the norm.
You write about the public experience of low carbing. The vox pops I refer to are criticisms of peer published papers by anonymous people. They are completely different things.
*FACEPALM* did you not read my first post in this thread? I spent an extensive time going through the methodology and appropriateness of this meta-analysis (to this forum) yet you are saying no one has discussed it? Well I am clearly wasting my time.”phoenix” said:A pity people haven't stuck to the actual meta analysis
I haven't seen any real discussion of it.
This statement is misleading – it is specifically looking at “low-carb diets” and it does not matter if a study “does what it says on the tin” as if the design is flawed, or erroneous, how can useful conclusions be made?”phoenix” said:It isn't a study looking at glycemic control and diet, it is what it says on the box looking at cohort studies of normal (non diabetic) people eating their habitual diets and the associations with mortality over time.
I didn't read all the studies but this was certainly the case in the Greek Study.However, most of the target populations were free of chronic disease at baseline and it is less likely that the dietary habits had been modulated according to their previous health status. A dose- response of relative risk was confirmed in few studies, which might make the results less plausible
jddukes said:Did you not read the majority of my post?
jddukes said:I think I was fairly clear in my post that I was commenting a lot on criticisms of peer-published papers by the general public to be a completely appropriate thing to do.
jddukes said:Just because someone is not at PhD level in that chosen field does not mean their input is unvaluable and should be dismissed - it should be considered. Many non-scientists make very good points about a peer-reviewed article's faults; conversely many emminent scientists make very bad judgements or even peer-reviewers do as well. Science is not exclusive to the "elite." I'm quite surprised that you work in science yet give the impression that because something is peer-reviewed it must be correct/or without flaws.
Osidge said:One of the main findings of the work that Sid brought to the attention of the Forum is that more research is needed. I would hope that we could all agree that such research would increase our knowledge so that we can make the best decisions about managing our diabetes.
No. The main finding that Sid brought to the attention of the Forum was that:Osidge said:One of the main findings of the work that Sid brought to the attention of the Forum is that more research is needed. I would hope that we could all agree that such research would increase our knowledge so that we can make the best decisions about managing our diabetes.
Regards
Doug
long term low carb diets are far from safe and are actually shown to increase all causes of mortality.
Ref 7 is a 2003 report by the "Nutrition Subcommittee of the Diabetes Care Advisory Committee of Diabetes UK"However, to date there has been no randomized controlled trial in type 2 DM patients and health care professionals remain wary of their use, particularly as standard dietary advice from Diabetes UK does not support this approach.7
A 2003 report has established an attitude by DUK that inhibits the necessary research we agree is necessary.Abstract:
These consensus-based recommendations emphasize the practical implementation of nutritional advice for people with diabetes, and describe the provision of services required to provide the information. Important changes from previous recommendations include greater flexibility in the proportions of energy derived from carbohydrate and monounsaturated fat, further liberalization in the consumption of sucrose, more active promotion of foods with a low glycaemic index, and greater emphasis on the provision of nutritional advice in the context of wider lifestyle changes, particularly physical activity. Monounsaturated fats are now promoted as the main source of dietary fat because of their lower susceptibility to lipid peroxidation and consequent lower atherogenic potential. Consumption of sucrose for patients who are not overweight can be increased up to 10% of daily energy derived from carbohydrate provided that this is eaten in the context of a healthy diet and distributed throughout the day. Evidence is presented for the effectiveness of advice provided by trained dieticians. The increasing evidence for the importance of good metabolic control and the growing requirement for measures to prevent Type 2 diabetes in an increasingly obese population will require major expansion of dietetic services if the standards in National Service Frameworks are to be successfully implemented.
Yorksman said:I am not under any obligation to read anything you write so please do not project blame onto me if I don't read beyond the first few sentances.
IanD said:Yorksman - your genetic postings are off-topic. I have suggested to the mods that you start a new thread.
jddukes said:I am not here to argue with anyone
jddukes said:I will exit this conversation though by stating my stance - general public have the right to analyse what a publication is saying relevant to them.