CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

FOOD

No drugs—just a vegan diet controls diabetes

Written by CYBERMED LIFE NEWS
facebook Share on Facebook
No drugs—just a vegan diet controls diabetes image

Diabetics could control their condition just by eating a vegan diet. The plant-based diet reduces many of the typical biological markers of type 2 diabetes without the need for any drugs to control the condition, a major review has concluded.

The diet also improves depression—the problem is three times greater among diabetics—and general wellbeing, researchers from the University of London have found. Diabetics also lose weight on the diet.

 

The dietary change could dramatically reduce the $176bn annual costs in the US, and the £24bn in the UK, to manage the problem with drugs and other medical therapies.

A vegan diet "significantly" reduces the symptoms of type 2 diabetes to the extent that drugs can be stopped, or dosages lowered, the researchers discovered after they took another look at 11 previously-published studies that involved 433 diabetics with an average age of 55.

In fact, the diet was more successful than most of the official guidelines recommended by diabetes help groups around the world, they say.

The vegan diet excludes all animal products, including dairy, and allows only fruits, vegetables, legumes (such as nuts and lentils), seeds and whole grains.

(Source: BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care, 2018; 6: e000534)

https://www.wddty.com/news/2018/11/no-drugs-just-a-vegan-diet-controls-diabetes.html?utm_source=Boomtrain&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=enews_03112018&utm_term&utm_content&bt_ee=FfDAW6J4RXMgSor9U1LPjAva4L5EKqcQfoeMb4utpKvniEMZDN5t1HSG8ufebzsQ&bt_ts=1541314839587


We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.