Quick update on this last post.
It really is a distillation of at least 6 books on the history of the growth of various adjacent industries, diabetes treatment and the understanding of what diabetes is, as well as the history of the saturated fat - heart health hypothesis, and how that affects diabetes treatment as well as driving the focus of trials and funding for trials.
There is an obvious danger in trying to condense so much into a few paragraphs - and some points need to be clarified.
1 - if there is anyone who has read this and felt that I'm pointing the finger of blame for T2DM on them - I whole heartedly apologise; never my intention and not at all what I'm getting at.
2 - is it fair to focus on sugar, and what do I mean by that?. Surely diabetes is not a new thing after all.
3 - What about all the other possible cause of Diabetes, office jobs, sedentary lifestyles and the Body’s inability to burn off excess energy consumption, as examples.
So, as usual, in as much of a spirit of humility as I can muster, and this being a place for challenging each other and trying to learn - particularly trying to learn what are the commonalities that we can agree on...
1 - Blame.
No, not at all. Sugar, in the form that you can add it to something, as opposed to just sucking it out of fruits; refined sucrose (being a pair of glucose and fructose molecules) has been around for hundreds of years - the Egyptians were instrumental in developing the technique for refining it, so that's a fair amount of time. Almost all the time it has been around, it was considered to be something of a wonder drug - the cure for all ills, the reviving spirit, the essence of energy and joy (all my words, I try to write from my head rather than copy pasting from source). Not a food.
As the refining (as well as the control of growing and distribution, or more simply, empire) takes a more industrial form, it becomes more widely available, and the sense quickly becomes that this is indeed wonderful stuff, and that it would be a form of cruelty to withhold it, particularly from children, who clearly derive such pleasure from sugar.
There has always been a suspicion that the attendant rise in what we now know as Type 2 diabetes was linked to over consumption of sugar. A suspicion, because there has always been a corresponding cry that it cannot possibly have anything to do with something so beneficial as sugar. Both from well minded "influencers" and people deriving wealth from the sugar industry; I really tend away from conspiracy, and it's clear from the record that sugar was very highly thought of (personally, it's a dosage thing for me).
How this affects diabetes treatment, is that the priority has often been about allowing sufferers of diabetes to enjoy sugar as much as the rest of "us" do - rather than seeing it as an intolerance to sugar that is best served by avoiding it, and becoming well.
2 - Sugar, or other carbs.
So, in many of these pages, I've used the term "sugars and starches are fattening" - because that was how it was always put, historically speaking, and that is still true. However, having read more deeply on the sugar (specifically refined sucrose) industry, again, every time in history that a community of people have given themselves the ability to increase their consumption of sugar, diabetes has followed. It really is unique, and difficult to avoid the conclusion. Every single anomaly is explainable - World War sugar rationing, diabetes rates fall. Diabetes in the landed gentry classed of Victorian Britain, but also pre-empire India. Diabetes sweeping into every country that adopts the Western diet. And so on.
When you are trying to reverse T2DM and insulin resistance, I truly believe that you absolutely must consider all starches, because they will turn into glucose - but sugar; refined sugar - gives the body both the double whammy of glucose and fructose (which is metabolically unique, and turns into triglycerides, leading directly to insulin resistance in adipose tissue - this is the fatty liver route) as well as the emotional desire for more sugar. There is not a single case of a population gaining access to sugar and not increasing consumption at a rate higher than any other substance.
3 - what about all these other causes.
Well, yes - lifestyle is clearly a factor, and thinking about reversal of T2DM, I personally have raised my game on sleep, stress and exercise; so of course I cannot simultaneously claim that they are not a factor.
However, when you see the same line being put out time and time again; "it can't be sugar, the mental stress and corpulence of the upper classes is to blame" - two hundred years ago when sugar was the privilege of the rich; and really at every point since - it surely cannot be sugar, what about (insert modern reference)?
Yet, there was a reason the term Mellitus (meaning "honey") was added in the 17th century. There is a current line of thought that "all calories are equal" - but this thinking really predates the understanding of endocrinology, and that a calorie's worth of sugar will do different things in the body compared to a calorie's worth of protein or fat. (or that protein with carbs will have a totally different effect than protein without...).
As for exercise, one of the most notable groups of diabetes sufferers was historically slaves working in sugar plantations. Indeed, President John Adams was primarily excited about Maple Syrup because it could be produced without the large need for slaves to work the plantations. Now - is anyone going to volunteer that this population was too sedentary?
In many ways the way that the entire narrative is steered toward Carbs and not Sugars is interesting. Even the momentous 1977 congressional report that lead to the changing of dietary guidelines and that we should shift 20% of total energy from fat to carbs - (and I've only just gotten to the bottom of this, but it's been bugging me for months since I found the original report) -
Goal 5 clearly talks about reducing sugar consumption by 40% (and that's by 40% of what people were consuming in the seventies)
By 1980 (I think) - that had been dropped, and all we are really left with is the increase carbs, and reduce fat.
Think what available food would be like if we were all as fixed on limiting sugar to 40% of what was normal in the seventies...