This is a little off topic, but when I
read this in Diabetes Health, I had to think about what I had just
read. Did I believe this? No, I do not believe this. Why do I not
believe this? In the way the study was done, I have to believe that
it may work for some people and the study in essence is too small and
too short a time frame. Twelve weeks and 90 people assigned to three
groups do not make sense.
And for this to be in a diabetes
magazine make me wonder why it did not include people with type 2
diabetes. For a person with diabetes, most types of potatoes will
bust a diet and destroy good management of blood glucose. Those on
no medications or on oral medications will develop problems with
diabetes management. A few on insulin can manage blood glucose, but
even then, they must be careful.
I can understand why the blog is very
short, as the author has no intention of getting into detail of any
significance because the study itself was lacking detail often seen
as part of the better studies. And being from the Journal of the
American College of Nutrition, this is easy to understand that the
study would be small and short to avoid problems that could be
experienced from an longer study.
In viewing the full report, this seems
very typical of nutrition studies - “Exclusions for study
participation were the following: food allergies or intolerances to
potatoes, cigarette smoker, currently modifying diet or exercise
patterns to gain or lose weight, excessive exercisers or trained
athletes, taking any medications that would affect glucose
metabolism, or the presence of other health problems requiring
ongoing intervention by their personal physician. Eligible men and
women were overweight based on their body mass index (BMI = 25–37
kg/m2),
over 18 years old, light to moderate exercisers and had normal
fasting plasma glucose and were able to meet the time and effort
requirements required for study participation.”
Some of the above are reasonable
exclusions, but selection was apparently looking for participants
that fit very limited criteria and help the people doing the study
arrive at the desired results. Probably why the study was only 24
weeks,
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