I have a few patients in my low-carb/keto clinic who have been diabetic for decades. They learned a long time ago to count their carbs to adjust their insulin units. Being diabetic is part of their lives and identities. After all, they have been told from day one that type 2 diabetes is a chronic and progressive disease.
One day, you get the diagnostic from your doctor. In Canada, the vast majority of doctors monitor fasting blood sugar levels, and/or HbA1c as part of the routine yearly checkups. When a result comes back abnormal, doctors can send patients for an oral glucose tolerance test where patients have to drink a glass a liquid sugar, and their blood is drawn at 0, 60 and 120 minutes.
If your fasting glucose value, your HbA1c or your oral glucose tolerance test values are abnormal, you either get a diagnostic of diabetes, or are warned that you are pre-diabetic, and that it's only a matter of time.
We now know that by the time you have this discussion with your doctor, the process has been going on for many years. If your insulin level had been tested, you could have been told you were becoming insulin resistant many years ago. On the path towards diabetes, but not there yet.
In Canada, if we did a Kraft insulin test on our patients instead of just dosing their blood sugar levels, we would get a whole different story. The Kraft insulin test measures the insulin response to a load of sugar. It can diagnose diabetes months to years before the oral glucose tolerance test can.
But then again, had you been diagnosed with insulin resistance, most doctors would have told you: eat less, exercise more, follow the food guide. That's it.
Eat less, exercise more
As you've likely already read on DietDoctor, eating less and exercising more is not a strategy that works long term. Counting calories is annoying and can rapidly make anyone become obsessive. Exercising for hours every day while trying to ignore your hunger can only last so long before you give up this masochistic and time-consuming approach. It's useless suffering. Exercising is good for all kinds of reasons. But it's not great for losing weight.
As a matter of fact, the vast majority of my overweight patients have been dieting and cutting calories all their lives. Many have a gastric band, and eat less than 1000 calories a day. Yet, they are still overweight. And chronically tired. Most also have some form of chronic pain.
For doctors, though, it's convenient. We put the blame on you. Instead of putting the blame on us for giving you the wrong advice for the past 4 or 5 decades, and for refusing to change our current views on the matter.
Follow the Food Guide
Zoe Harcombe wrote an excellent piece recently on how someone following the Irish Food Guide would surely end up with diabesity. I believe the same results would happen with the Canadian Food Guide or most Western world food guides that promote carbs and demonize fats. For instance, the Canadian guide recommends young adults to eat between 6 and 8 servings of grains per day. That can easily amount to 176 g of carbs or more, which is the equivalent to 42 teaspoons of white sugar. And that's just the grains. There are the fruit and the low-fat dairy products, which all add to the total amount of sugar ingested daily.
We know that, on average, people follow their food guide.
We also know that the rates of obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease have increased exponentially in the last decades.
What does that tell you?
Is being sick the new normal?
Most of the patients who enroll in our low-carb program want to stop being sick. They are overweight, diabetic, or chronically tired, they suffer from chronic pain, and they have none of the vitality the Food Guide said they should have. Most also feel they are not helped very much by their numerous medications.
However, Nurse Sylvie and I sometimes encounter patients who want to stop being sick, but who have a hard time adjusting to not being sick. They have been diabetic for most of their adult lives. They sometimes have diabetes jewelry, even type 2 diabetes tattoos! It's part of who they are. They were told their disease was chronic and progressive, and that there was nothing they could do about it, except, of course, take their pills, and eventually their insulin.
We've had patients tell us not to lower their insulin, even when it's clearly needed. Every small decrease was a battle, and was met with fear, tears and anxiety. We've also had people who dropped out of our program after a few weeks, despite the fact that they were doing great, losing weight and medications.
At first, I was totally confused by patients resisting me lowering their medication, and by successful patients dropping out halfway through.
I'm wondering if being sick hasn't just become the new normal. Because it's just some common. It's normal to be type 2 diabetic. It's normal to take multiple drugs. It's normal to visit your doctor numerous times per year, and to be told that there is nothing you can do about your chronic diseases. It's normal that your doctor's only approach to your chronic diseases is to tell you to follow the food guide, and/or to prescribe you pills. It's so frequent, it's normal.
And many people don't want to be outside of the norm. Even if that means not being sick anymore.
But being sick from diseases caused by lifestyle habits is NOT the new normal.
As a patient, do not accept such a fate. Do not get used to being sick. It is not part of your identity. It doesn't have to be part of your life. Get healthy eating keto, and spread the word around you.
As a doctor, do not accept that the chronic diseases of your patients caused by lifestyle habits are a fatality, and that there is nothing you can do about it. Patients are sick and will be sick? Glucose levels are rising and waist circumferences are increasing constantly? This is not normal. You can help change that. Coach them to go low-carb. Seeing them get healthier, now that's the new normal.
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Dr. Èvelyne Bourdua-Roy