Doctors risk being fired if they tell a T2 to low carb because their contract says they must adhere to NHS policy. Neither Dr John Briffa nor Dr Charles Clark are NHS doctors, they have private practices.
Low carb is accepted as a treatment for epilepsy in children in the US and Great Ormond Street Hospital conducted a successful study. In New Zealand it is used to treat patients with Crohn's disease and has been studied in the US and proven to be a successful treatment for non-fatty liver disease. So low carb is being used around the world as a treatment for small populations of patients with ill health.
The biggest population with ill health which low carb would benefit in the UK would be people with diabetes. But because we can be treated with drugs we're not seen as anything other than normal obese people. Obesity is a symptom of T2 and not everyone has it. It's not the chronic disease.
Diabetes UK is funded by at least one cereal manufacturer so the charity has to be biased. It isn't acting in the interests of people with diabetes when fundraisers hand out Krispy Kreme donuts. It doesn't promulgate alternatives to the NHS despite all the studies.
Before oral meds T2s were treated by diet and if that didn't work, insulin. Oral meds were seen as a breakthrough to give people with diabetes a normal life like anyone else. BG meters were also supposed to be a breakthrough and do away with peeing on sticks.
People with diabetes most often see nurses who do seem to me to have the attitude that T2 is self-inflicted. I am constantly stunned at how badly people in the NHS have treated me. It really makes me angry.
Now that I'm size 16 and still losing and have normal BG the HCPs are all pleased. But the reality is that though my GP is supportive it's me who put the hard work in, not him. That I need fewer drugs is only because I low carb.
I am seeing a change in attitude because of my size. I was asked this morning during a blood test: "Are you a Type1 ?" But that discrimination just shouldn't happen.
Low carb is accepted as a treatment for epilepsy in children in the US and Great Ormond Street Hospital conducted a successful study. In New Zealand it is used to treat patients with Crohn's disease and has been studied in the US and proven to be a successful treatment for non-fatty liver disease. So low carb is being used around the world as a treatment for small populations of patients with ill health.
The biggest population with ill health which low carb would benefit in the UK would be people with diabetes. But because we can be treated with drugs we're not seen as anything other than normal obese people. Obesity is a symptom of T2 and not everyone has it. It's not the chronic disease.
Diabetes UK is funded by at least one cereal manufacturer so the charity has to be biased. It isn't acting in the interests of people with diabetes when fundraisers hand out Krispy Kreme donuts. It doesn't promulgate alternatives to the NHS despite all the studies.
Before oral meds T2s were treated by diet and if that didn't work, insulin. Oral meds were seen as a breakthrough to give people with diabetes a normal life like anyone else. BG meters were also supposed to be a breakthrough and do away with peeing on sticks.
People with diabetes most often see nurses who do seem to me to have the attitude that T2 is self-inflicted. I am constantly stunned at how badly people in the NHS have treated me. It really makes me angry.
Now that I'm size 16 and still losing and have normal BG the HCPs are all pleased. But the reality is that though my GP is supportive it's me who put the hard work in, not him. That I need fewer drugs is only because I low carb.
I am seeing a change in attitude because of my size. I was asked this morning during a blood test: "Are you a Type1 ?" But that discrimination just shouldn't happen.