THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

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THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Promoting a low carb high fat lifestyle for the safe control of diabetes. Eat whole fresh food, more drugs are not the answer.


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    ADA New Standards of Care for People with Diabetes

    yoly
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    ADA New Standards of Care for People with Diabetes Empty ADA New Standards of Care for People with Diabetes

    Post by yoly Thu Dec 25 2014, 14:35

    (How surprising, more statin drugs)

    http://www.diabetes.org/newsroom/press-releases/2014/new-standards-of-care-provide-guidelines-for-statin-use-for-people-with-diabetes-to-prevent-heart-disease.html?loc=news

    Alexandria, Virginia
    December 23, 2014

    The American Diabetes Association is recommending a less stringent diastolic blood pressure target for people with diabetes and that all people with diabetes take either moderate or high doses of statins, in keeping with recent changes to guidelines for cardiovascular risk management enacted by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA). These recommendations are reflected in the most recent changes to the Association’s annual revised Standards of Medical Care, being published in a special supplement to the January issue of Diabetes Care.

    The new Standards of Medical Care are updated annually to provide the best possible guidance to health care professionals for diagnosing and treating adults and children with all forms of diabetes. The Standards are based upon the most current scientific evidence, which is rigorously reviewed by the Association’s multi-disciplinary Professional Practice Committee.

    Last year, the ACC and AHA jointly issued new recommendations for cardiovascular risk management that set up a decision tree to determine when to prescribe the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs, called statins, that would have placed the vast majority of people with diabetes under this therapy. Until now, the Association has not issued a response to these guidelines and their appropriateness for people with diabetes, who are two to four times as likely as people without diabetes to have a heart attack or stroke. Cardiovascular disease is the number one killer of people with diabetes.

    Because people with diabetes are already at high risk for heart disease, the revised Standards of Medical Care call for all people with diabetes to take statins, said Richard W. Grant, MD, MPH, Research Scientist, Kaiser Permanente Division of Research and Chair of the Association’s Professional Practice Committee. They recommend people with diabetes who are under 40 years of age, or who are between the ages of 40 and 75 with no additional cardiovascular disease risk factors, take a moderate-intensity statin, while those of all ages who have cardiovascular disease, or those ages 40-75 who have additional cardiovascular risk factors, take a high-intensity statin.

    “The big change here is to recommend starting either moderate or high-intensity statins based on the patient’s risk profile,” said Grant, “rather than on LDL level. Since all patients with diabetes are at increased risk, it is just a matter of deciding whom to start on moderate versus high-intensity statin doses.”

    The revised recommendations also call for a less stringent diastolic blood pressure goal for people with diabetes of 90 mmHg, up from 80 mmHg.

    “While observational studies find that lower blood pressure generally seems to be better, the higher quality randomized trial evidence most strongly supports the treatment target of 90 mmHg,” Grant said.

    Other changes to the Standards of Medical Care include a new recommendation that all individuals, including those with diabetes, not only exercise regularly, but that they break up periods of inactivity throughout the day so that no more than 90 minutes at a time are spent being sedentary. They also call for people with diabetes to perform resistance training at least twice a week, unless otherwise instructed by their doctors for medical reasons.

    The new Standards have also been reorganized and renamed. Previously, the Association issued “Clinical Practice Recommendations” with a section on the “Standards of Medical Care.” The Association now issues a single document, the “Standards of Medical Care,” divided into 14 sections to highlight important topic areas and make it easier to navigate.

    “We’ve revised our recommendations, as we do every year, to reflect the best and most current research affecting the treatment and care of people with diabetes,” said Jane Chiang, the Association’s Senior Vice President for Medical Affairs and Community Information. “ Health care providers know that the Association Standards contain the most up-to-date information. However, we also wanted to help readers navigate through the information overload, and felt that a new format would enable easier access. Ultimately, our goal is to improve the lives of those who are living with this disease.”

    The new Standards have also:

    Lowered the BMI cut point for screening overweight or obese Asian Americans to 23 kg/m2 (from 25 kg/m2). The Association has issued a separate release with details outlining the reasons for making this change.

    Added a new section for the management of diabetes in pregnancy, which includes the recommendation that a one-step test be used for screening for gestational diabetes.

    Included the new A1C target of less than 7.5 percent for children and adolescents with diabetes, which was announced in a position statement earlier this year.

    Made clear that e-cigarettes are not supported by the Association as an alternative to smoking or as a means of facilitating smoking cessation.

    Revised immunization guidelines for older adults to reflect new recommendations by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that people age 65 or older who have not received a pneumonia vaccine receive two separate shots, PCV13 (Prevnar), followed 12 months later by PPSV23 (Pneumovax).

    - See more at: http://www.diabetes.org/newsroom/press-releases/2014/new-standards-of-care-provide-guidelines-for-statin-use-for-people-with-diabetes-to-prevent-heart-disease.html?loc=news#sthash.ApgWorBz.dpuf
    Jan1
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    Post by Jan1 Fri Dec 26 2014, 16:44

    Thanks for posting this Yoly.

    Now am I being cynical? If current targets are not met - hey lets just raise them! It will make the HCP's look good and increase sales for the pharmaceutical companies, what a winning combination!

    I don't think! Thank goodness there are well informed people who know there is another way and do take time and trouble to spread the word. It doesn't always come easy to spread the good news that living a LCHF lifestyle can bring, but it does give others the opportunity to think and question what their health care professionals are telling them.

    I know many here would not take statins, I know many here would shudder at an A1c of 6.5 or over.

    Yes, I know I am not diabetic but I also know that eating too many carbs. / sugars does not do anyone any favours, whether diabetic or not.

    What do you think?

    All the best Jan.
    yoly
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    Post by yoly Sat Dec 27 2014, 18:19

    Sorry I didn't see your post earlier, but with family and festivities have not had much time to read. ADA and most professional organizations are still tied to old dogmas. The change is all around them but the cholesterol theory and the fat diet/ heart disease hypothesis still hunts them. The ties to big pharma doesn't help move things along either. The modern high carb / low fat diet is being repudiated by almost everyone in the health field. Even food company are beginning to move to high protein, they are not ready to move to high fat yet.

    The future will depend on the people and the dissemination of ideas. Because drugs companies and the medical profession have to keep coming up with new drugs and theories to keep the profit levels. Soon all statins drugs will lose their patents. So they will come with something new that will not be healthy low carb diet since there is no profit to be made in that. There is no incentive in finding cures for big pharma, better to just treat incurable progressive diseases. Unless some honest researchers make some real advancement on how to really "cure" diseases like heart disease and diabetes, if that is even possible, because the body is very complex. Our best chance at health is LCHF and exercise, avoiding as much as we can excess and contamination of the modern environment.
    graham64
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    Post by graham64 Sat Dec 27 2014, 22:02

    No wonder the ADA are promoting statins they need to keep their corporate sponsors happy now don't they Shocked

    Abbott
    AstraZeneca
    BD Medical-Diabetes Care
    Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals
    Eli Lilly
    GlaxoSmithKline
    Janssen Pharmaceuticals
    LifeScan Inc. and Animas Corp.
    Medtronic
    Merck & Company
    Novo Nordisk
    Sanofi

    http://www.diabetes.org/about-us/corporate-support/our-corporate-supporters.html
    Eddie
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    Post by Eddie Sun Dec 28 2014, 08:28

    graham64 wrote:No wonder the ADA are promoting statins they need to keep their corporate sponsors happy now don't they Shocked

    Abbott
    AstraZeneca
    BD Medical-Diabetes Care
    Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals
    Eli Lilly
    GlaxoSmithKline
    Janssen Pharmaceuticals
    LifeScan Inc. and Animas Corp.
    Medtronic
    Merck & Company
    Novo Nordisk
    Sanofi

    http://www.diabetes.org/about-us/corporate-support/our-corporate-supporters.html

    I call these organisations Black OPs outfits. Almost every time I see a charity or organisation involved with health or diet, big pharma or junk food is paying the piper and he who pays the piper names the tune. Most governments are corrupt, politicians receive money from big corporations, the big corporations produce mostly junk food, this over time makes people ill, and then big pharma has the cure. Trouble is it is all backfiring now, healthcare schemes cannot come up with the money to keep the biggest ponzi scheme of all time going. Everyone can hear the big clock ticking, but so many do not know or want to know the time.

    More Black Ops outfits and pay masters.

    DUK The diabetes charity.

    Abbott Bayer Boehringer Ingelheim Bristol Myers Squibb Bupa Bunzl Everyclick First Capital Connect Flora pro.activ Kodak Lilly Lloyds Pharmacy Menarini Merck Serono Morphy Richards Merck Sharp & Dohme Limited Novartis Novo Nordisk Nursing Times PAL Technologies Ltd Pfizer Rowlands Pharmacies Sanofi-aventis SplendaTakeda Tesco Diets

    HEART UK -The Nation’s Cholesterol Charity

    Abbott Healthcare Alpro UK AstraZeneca BHR Pharma Cambridge Weight Plan Cereal Partners UK (Sh Wheat) Food & Drink Federation Fresenius Medical Care (UK) Limited Genzyme Therapeutics Hovis Kellogg’s (Optivita) Kowa Pharmaceutical Europe Co Limited L.IN.C Medical Systems Limited Merck Sharpe & Dhome PlanMyFood Pfizer Premier Foods Progenika Biopharma s.a. Roche Products Limited Unilever (Flora) Welch’s (Purple Grape Juice)

    The British Nutrition Foundation

    However, the organisation's 39 members, which contribute to its funding, include – beside the Government, the EU – Cadbury, Kellogg's, Northern Foods, McDonald's, PizzaExpress, the main supermarket chains except Tesco, and producer bodies such as the Potato Council. The chairman of its board of trustees, Paul Hebblethwaite, is also chairman of the Biscuit, Cake, Chocolate and Confectionery Trade Association.

    The European Food Information Council

    Current EUFIC members are: AB Sugar, Ajinomoto Sweeteners Europe, Bunge, Cargill, Cereal Partners, Coca-Cola, Danone, DSM Nutritional Products Europe Ltd., Ferrero, Kraft Foods, Mars, McDonald's, Nestlé, PepsiCo, Pfizer Animal Health, Südzucker, and Unilever.

    The British Heart Foundation

    Unilever Flora margarine.

    Sponsored content


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