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Featured Diabetes Articles

Diabetic Nerve Damage: The Height Connection
If you have diabetes, it may be better to be short than tall. Why? Well, it has to do with those pseky foot and leg ulcers that can cause anthing from minor inconvenience to amputation. When ulcers become series, it's becaue they have become infected, ...

Get More Out Of Life While Managing Your Diabetes
When I was first diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes at the age of 21, I had not given the first thought to living a healthy diabetic lifestyle. As far as I was concerned, a healthy lifestyle was reserved only for fitness junkies and overweight moms.I didn't ...

Have Diabetes, But Enjoy Quality Food? Try Diabetic Recipes!
Having diabetes certainly limits some of the food you can eat, but with the right diabetic recipes you can still enjoy fine food. Sometimes, it is hard to know what foods are safe for you to eat. For your safety, you and your dietitian should work ...





Diabetic Gains From Nutritious Whole Grains
 
My mother was a diabetic and when she was diagnosed, it was called adult onset diabetes. Do you know why they changed the name to type 2? I'm afraid the sad truth is it can no longer be
called "adult," because the deadly type 2 diabetes is now showing up in children.

Diabetes has been dramatically on the increase for the past century. Today about 23 million Americans are diabetic and one quarter of those are undiagnosed. Whereas people don't
generally die of diabetes, they just go blind or lose their limbs, it often leads to heart disease. And heart disease is our biggest premature killer.

Native Americans, who at one time had no diabetes, now have the highest incidence in the world. What happened?
Traditionally, they had lived on an all natural, unrefined diet. Once they were moved to reservations, their only choice was a modern "white man's diet" of refined foods. Since then, there's been a huge jump in the incidence of Native American diabetes. Among the Pima Indians in Southwest Arizona, 40%
of the population are type 2 diabetics. Interestingly enough,
they're eating many of the same foods that they were eating on their traditional diet. Only today, they're using refined versions of those foods - refined corn products, refined sugars
and refined grains.

Although we've known this information for many years, a peer review study just published in this month's American Journal of Clinical Nutrition has proven that whole grains, such as brown rice, oatmeal and whole wheat, can help protect people from diabetes.

The team of researchers from Simmons College, Harvard Medical School, followed the eating habits of 43,000 men (ages 40 to 75) for about 12 years. Although they all started out healthy, nearly 3% developed diabetes in just over a decade. What were they
eating?

Those who ate the least amount of whole grains had a 60% higher incidence of developing type 2 diabetes than those eating the highest level of whole grains. But there's even more evidence. And, this is a real shocker. Obese men who ate the highest amount of whole grains, and were also physically active, developed 52% less type 2 diabetes, even though they were overweight.

Two other recent studies focusing on women and whole grains confirmed these same Harvard findings: whole grains can help protect from diabetes and possibly other degenerative diseases.

Why?

Whole grains are low glycemic carbohydrates. This means lower blood sugar and less insulin production. But refined grains are high glycemic carbohydrates that more than double blood sugar levels. This causes an insulin surge to clear sugar out of the blood. After a while, the body is no longer capable of handling this blood sugar onslaught. That's when a person becomes a type 2 diabetic. Then high blood sugar can increase the risk of diabetic related heart disease, kidney failure and blindness.

The Harvard research team's conclusion to this study was to recommend that people eat more whole grains. They said, "Whole grain products" have "the potential to reduce substantially the incidence of type 2 diabetes and possibly other chronic diseases when sustained over time."

Makes a lot of sense to me. Whole grains are in their natural,
nutritious form, just the way they were meant to be. You see, "It's not nice to try and fool Mother Nature." And, in her never-to-be-humble opinion, she doesn't mind telling us,
"I told you so!"

About the Author
Moss Greene is the Nutrition Host at Bellaonline.com. Visit her web site at http://www.bellaonline.com/site/nutrition to find out how to look better, feel your best and have more energy -
naturally. Subscribe now to the News You Can Use Newsletter by going to http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art3859.asp


Diabetes News



Mother Nature Network

Diabetes Deaths Dropping in US
Fox News
Death rates for people with diabetes dropped dramatically from 1997 to 2006, according to US health officials. Among diabetic Americans, deaths from all causes declined by 23 percent during that decade. Meanwhile, deaths linked to heart disease and ...
People with diabetes living longer than beforeMother Nature Network
People with diabetes living longerGant Daily
Heart disease and stroke deaths drop significantly for people with diabetesSacramento Bee
Reuters -New York Daily News -UPI.com
all 551 news articles »

New York Times (blog)

Diabetes Dramatically on the Rise Among Teenagers
Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog)
Nearly a quarter of American children and adolescents is developing type 2 diabetes or has already the disease, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), published in the journal Pediatrics.
Diabetes death rate drops; skin cells become heart cellsUSA TODAY
Education and Prevention: Creating Public Service Campaigns About Type 2 DiabetesNew York Times (blog)
Teenage Diabetes Rates SoarWBUR
Care2.com -Philadelphia Inquirer -WFAA
all 58 news articles »

Telegraph.co.uk

How many doctors does a woman with diabetes need?
Fox News
If you are a woman living with diabetes, do you know how many doctors you need? It can be hard to determine if you need more than the usual recommended number of physicians. I happen to be a person who would rather know than be surprised by an illness, ...
Diabetes treatment is a postcode lotteryTelegraph.co.uk
Diabetes care 'has been failing for decade'BBC News
Report reveals shock diabetes deathsgulfnews.com
The Independent -East Anglian Daily Times
all 251 news articles »

A Sweet Life

People With Diabetes May Need Earlier Colon Screen
WebMD
By Charlene Laino May 22, 2012 -- Should people with diabetes be screened for colon cancer at younger ages than is usually recommended? That may very well be the case, say researchers who found that people in their 40s with type 2 diabetes are about as ...
Blood Sugar Basics Game Plan Now Available to Help Patients Tackle Type 2 DiabetesMarketWatch (press release)
Blood Sugar Basics Game Plan seeks to help Type 2 diabetics better manage ...Drug Store News

all 18 news articles »

CBS News

Mom's weight, not blood sugar levels, may lead to birth of large baby
CBS News
According to the study, slightly high blood glucose levels -- not enough to diagnose the mother with gestational diabetes according to Canadian standards -- had no association with having a larger bundle of joy once weight was taken into an account.
Obesity in pregnancy strongest predictor of large babiesFox News
Mom's Weight May Affect Baby's BirthweightMedPage Today
Pregnant women should watch weight to avoid having overly big babies: studyThe Province
U.S. News & World Report -Chicago Tribune -EmpowHer
all 58 news articles »