Rethinking Diabetes
What Science Reveals about Diet, Insulin and Successful Treatments
-
- $19.99
-
- $19.99
Publisher Description
Over 400 million people around the world have been diagnosed with diabetes. Before the discovery of insulin, diabetes was treated through diet, from eating purely meat to the reliance on fats, and repeated fasting. After two centuries of conflicting medical advice, most authorities today believe that those with diabetes can have the same dietary freedom enjoyed by the rest of us, including the occasional ice-cream, leaving the job of controlling the disease to insulin therapy. However, this guiding principle has been accompanied by an explosive rise in diabetes over the last fifty years, and the expectation that sufferers' health will deteriorate steadily over time.
In this ground-breaking book, award-winning science writer Gary Taubes explores the history of the treatment of diabetes, elucidating the way that badly conceived research influences the guidance that doctors offer today, at the expense of patients' long-term well-being. Passionately argued and deeply researched, Rethinking Diabetes reimagines diabetes care with diet at its centre, and is hugely persuasive in its questioning of the established wisdom that may have enabled the current epidemic of diabetes and obesity.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Current medical guidance for treating diabetes may be fundamentally flawed, according to this provocative study. Medical journalist Taubes (The Case for Keto) notes that diabetes treatment consisted of following high-fat diets until the 1921 discovery of insulin. In 1971, the American Diabetes Association began advising diabetes patients to adopt the American Heart Association's general dietary guidelines for "carbohydrate-rich/low-fat diets," despite the fact that carbohydrates were "the one macronutrient that bodies could not safely metabolize." The advice, Taubes explains, was based on the paternalistic assumption that patients wouldn't follow a more restricted diet and so it would be easier to instead rely on insulin therapy. Worse, the high-carb diet had little evidence to support it, and when clinical trials were finally conducted on its effects in the 1980s, they found the diet exacerbated "defects in fat and carbohydrate metabolism" for diabetes patients. Taubes warns that the "medicalization of modern life" has led to a reliance on pharmaceuticals with harmful long-term side effects (long-term use of insulin therapy has been linked to severe hypoglycemia and weight gain) and makes "medical associations become ever more likely to consider... diseases beyond the control of patients." He argues for the need for more research on how diets, such as a low-carb/high-fat regimen, could benefit diabetes patients. Exhaustively researched and providing cautionary insight into the fallibilities of medical advice, this intrigues.
Customer Reviews
Compelling reading
As a conflicted diabetic I needed to read this book. Read it I have and now the road ahead is clearer. Thank you.