Every once in a
while, something comes along that gets to you and gives you a swift
kick in the backside. The eighteenth was one of those times, the
person I respect was the bearer of the message, and he does not even
know it until now. In his blog here about Dr. Bernstein’s diabetes university, David Mendosa said, “Medicine is finally coming around
to recognize that carbs, not fats, are the enemy of diabetes...”
I often ignore statements like this,
but recently I had a doctor ask me what type of food plan I was
using. When I said low carb, medium to high fat, I did not receive
the usual lecture about fats being bad, just an okay and with no
gallbladder, be careful. That should have registered at the time,
but I gave it no more thought until I was reading David's post.
On the nineteenth, I called the doctor
and asked him why he had changed away from the lecturing about eating
low fat. I about fell out of my chair at his answer. He said, “I
am learning from my patients and more are going medium to low carb
and medium to high fat.” He continued that if they were not afraid
to tell me that, then what was I missing. He said I went on a search
and found other doctors saying the same thing and then I came across
several diabetes bloggers that were writing about this. The final
convincing came in a blog a patient of mine wrote about an interview with Adele Hite. He said her reference to Dr. Eric Westman was the
information I needed as I had been reading about some of his work and
this sent me back to research his work.
I accepted this and decided that I had
better listen to Dr. Bernstein’s diabetes videos or classes on YouTube. Yes, they were interesting and included some interesting
American Diabetes Association history. This confirmed for me why the
ADA is always behind the times and research. They are afraid of
making changes and will only change when the preponderance of
evidence forces the change. While I can agree that change is not
always best, the ADA is way behind the times and seems to wait until
many doctors have already made the change, then they claim the credit
when they make the change. He now has four videos posted.
Please take time to read David's blog
as he makes some great points. I had wanted to comment on his blog,
but when I thought more about it, I felt this blog would be better
and I did not want to curb my thoughts.
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