- Messages
- 4,395
- Location
- Suffolk, UK
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Diet drinks - the artificial sweeteners taste vile.
Having to forswear foods I have loved all my life.
Trying to find low carb meals when eating out.
It means balanced for your own individual dietary needs.
I think saying "avoid dieticians" is also dangerous advice to give anyone diagnosed with a chronic metabolic disease like diabetes. It's like saying "avoid diabetic nurses" or "avoid GPs". None of them necessarily have all the answers nor are on the cutting edge of medical research, but they are professionals who continuously study their field and dispense generally accepted wisdom within the context of their individual patient analysis. Yes, this changes over time as research evolves. Yes, it hasn't been correct sometimes. No, they are not in the thrall of the food industry.
The alternative to listening to professional dieticians is either proceeding with no information or having some magic crystal ball to know whose "amazing research" to put ones trust in. Dispensing any advice such as practically cutting out an entire food group should ring alarm bells to anyone.
Nobody is poo-pooing LCHF diets. Cutting out all carbs though is potentially dangerous to ones health.
It's like saying "avoid diabetic nurses" or "avoid GPs".
Cutting out all carbs though is potentially dangerous to ones health.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070619173537.htmI have to ask for medical references to support your opinion.
"Potentially dangerous" is a very strong use of words.
I do my darndest to avoid them as well as I have found them to be way behind the times and in my experience give misleading information.
Not convinced by that either. Certainly doesn't seem to harm the people who live without them quite happily.
Have we stopped accepting that they *can* be wrong without being useless?
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070619173537.htm
I think it is no stronger than saying "all carbs are bad carbs" to a newly diagnosed person. Some people may be OK on a zero dietary carb diet. However, that shouldn't (IMHO) be a de facto recommendation for everyone, because it may not suit them in the long term.
Look, I'm doing a low-carb diet myself, but I'm being very careful not be evangelical about it, or any other diet.
I'm not convinced that this study justifies the term "dangerous" though.
I'll point out that I said "potentially dangerous", which it is if has the potential to result in bowel cancer for some people. Again, this study is not denigrating low carb diets. All study adds to the pool of knowledge. I'm just making the point that there is no more evidence for the statement "all carbs are bad" than for any other absolute statement.
As with medical advice, such suggestions on here should be properly qualified.
Even esquimaux in the olden days did not eat a zero carb diet. They ate moss that they found in the stomachs of creatures they had killed.A zero carb diet is potentially super healthy.
So what? I never said they did.Even esquimaux in the olden days did not eat a zero carb diet. They ate moss that they found in the stomachs of creatures they had killed.
Quotation from http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology-old/museum/danielle_longhouse/keepers/food.htmMoss?
I don't think that seals and fish eat much moss.
Are you confusing them with reindeer herders - the Saami, I think they are called.
I was trying to say that no-one really eats a zero carb diet, even the old-time Inuit whose diet was almost zero carb. But of course if you really eat nothing but meat, fish and fats, I am mistaken.So what? I never said they did.
Quotation from http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology-old/museum/danielle_longhouse/keepers/food.htm
"Inuit ate only meat and fish. Lichens and moss were the only types of vegetation that grew in the Arctic. The Inuit people did not want to eat the lichens and moss right off the rocks. (Yuck! I don't think you would like to eat moss either!) There was one way that the Inuit could get the nutrients that they needed from vegetation and this might surprise you! Caribou like to eat moss and lichens. When Inuit hunters killed a caribou, they opened up its stomach to see if the caribou had eaten any lichens and moss. If some of this partially digested vegetation was in the stomach, the Inuit would eat it to get the nutrients they needed. This was a delicacy, which means that it was very special and very desired."
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