I've lost over 26kg in 4 months by adding fat and removing carbs from my diet.
It may sound counter intuitive but my understanding (I'm not a doctor or scientist) is that carbs are metabolised into glucose in your blood and excess glucose that isn't used as fuel is converted into fat by the adipose cells in your body. If you continue to eat more carbs than you need for fuel, you will continue to store the excess as fat
If you reduce carbs, your body will metabolise some of the stored fat to use as fuel and you will lose weight (as well as improving your blood sugar)
Hello and welcome to the forum Paula
Best wishes RRB
Good advice thanks for taking the time to replyHey Paula, slash those carbs and add some fat to your diet, fat will run your engine without making you constantly want to eat more.
Works for most.
Fantastic! Well done you! Thanks for replyingI've lost over 26kg in 4 months by adding fat and removing carbs from my diet.
It may sound counter intuitive but my understanding (I'm not a doctor or scientist) is that carbs are metabolised into glucose in your blood and excess glucose that isn't used as fuel is converted into fat by the adipose cells in your body. If you continue to eat more carbs than you need for fuel, you will continue to store the excess as fat
If you reduce carbs, your body will metabolise some of the stored fat to use as fuel and you will lose weight (as well as improving your blood sugar)
Hi and welcome Paula. NHS support is very patchy and I don't hold my breath. I'm just grateful to have been diagnosed when I was, and the rest is up to me. No kicks administered here, it's not your fault.
Are you eating quite a lot of carbs? They make you hungry for more carbs. And they turn to sugar in our blood.
Tell us what you eat and when you test.
Wow thank u. Im going to push and get another appointment and go in armed with questions and do some research myself. It is hard though as you would think that the NHS should give the best advice but clearly this isnt always the case!Hi. As your HBa1C is still too high you should be having a new HBa1C every 3 months. Setup your own appointment with the DN or relevant GP and book a blood test with reception 2 weeks before. This is how my surgery works and it's works well. I always leave the current appointment with an agreed month for the next appointment and possibly blood test form and urine bottle. You should be getting dietary advice but if it was me I would decline that (politely) as NHS dieticians usually haven't a clue; follow this forum's advice and redcue your carbs in the diet. Your surgery (or hosptial dept if referred) should check your feet, blood pressure, weight etc at each appoinment and discuss (not tell) medication with you and agreed objectives. You should have a retinal exam yearly at the local hospital screening dept. With regard to food craving it is common for many of us having grown up with a carb overload. You have to force yourself to reduce the carbs and don't buy stuff you shouldn't. Read the labels on everything and look for total carbs figure. Have as much protein and fat as you want as these will make you feel full and will not add much to blood sugar or weight. Do come back with any further questions.
Hi Paula. I'm new to this too, however, it seems I was lucky. My DN gave me a blood testing kit and some guidelines on my first visit and encouraged me to attend the DESMOND education day. Which I did, but it seems the NHS don't give you the best information regarding eating,they recommended the 'balanced' approach, protein, veg and carbs. Like you, I'm a bit lazy but I had to give myself a kick up the backside and make an effort but I'm dying for something sweet, chocolate covered fudge would hit the spot LOL. Someone on the site recommended this http://www.bantingnetwork.co.za/7-day-plan-week-1/ at least it gives you some ideas what to eat.Wow thank u. Im going to push and get another appointment and go in armed with questions and do some research myself. It is hard though as you would think that the NHS should give the best advice but clearly this isnt always the case!
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