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Listen Now! November is Diabetes Awareness MonthTo wrap
up our shows on Diabetes this month we will be talking to Jean Blake
from The Canadian Diabetes Association. Then Pam and Toma are going to
open the phones to callers as they recap the month and discuss putting
self into responsible Self Managment of Chronic Disease and Medical
self advocate. Jean Blake, M. Ed.
Jean Blake is the Executive Director,
Canadian Diabetes Association, Pacific Area. Her role includes
advocacy, programs and services and fund development for research and
other association activities. She is also the current Chair of the BC
Healthy Living Alliance, a provincial coalition of organizations
working together to improve the health of British Columbians by
promoting physical activity, healthy eating and living smoke-free.
She
has held various roles in health care, including the North Shore Health
Region and Lions Gate Hospital in North Vancouver as the Director of
Education and Organization Development.
Jean also worked as a
training performance consultant with AchieveGlobal. She was a Master
Trainer in Organizational Effectiveness with AchieveGlobal and is a
certified Change and Transition Management consultant. She has designed
and delivered a variety of performance management workshops. Some disturbing facts About diabetes. Some disturbing facts:
Adults with diabetes are two to four times more likely to have heart
disease or suffer a stroke than people without diabetes. It has been estimated that at the time of diagnosis, 50% of people with
type 2 diabetes already have some vascular disease, because diabetes often goes
undetected for many years. People with Pre-Diabetes are 50% more likely to have a heart attack or
stroke than are people with normal blood glucose levels. Yet surveys show that over 65% of people with diabetes do not consider
cardiovascular disease (CVD) to be a serious complication of diabetes, and only
18% of people with diabetes believe that they are at increased risk for
CVD.
Why is there a relationship between heart disease and
diabetes?
High blood glucose levels over time can damage blood vessels, resulting in
blood vessel walls that are thicker and less elastic; this makes it more
difficult for the blood to pass through. Many people with diabetes also have abnormal blood fats (also called
lipids, which include cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL and HDL) caused both by
poorly controlled diabetes as well as poor diet. Elevated lipids can further
clog blood vessels, increasing your risk of a heart attack, stroke, or poor
circulation in your legs.
Canadians seem largely unaware of the disturbing facts surrounding
diabetes and unconcerned about their own risk for the disease. According
to a recent national survey sponsored by the pharmaceutical company Aventis
Pharma, only 39 per cent of the 1,500 people questioned said they were
"very" or "somewhat" concerned about developing diabetes (compared with
60 per cent who expressed concern about cancer and 57 per cent who worried
about heart disease).
Diabetes
is costing British columbia $700,000,000.00 per year just for
treatment. The total cost are much higher. In 1950 there was less than
1% of the population diagnosed with diabetes. That number rose to 3% in
the mid 80s and is pegged at 7% in 2007. Diabetes is expexted to
increase to 14% of the population. Many experts from around the world
say at least 80% of the cases of diabetes can be prevented with proper
diet.
One leading diabetes expert at the University of Toronto likens the rising
rate of diabetes to the "perfect storm," a reference to the raging fronts
that converged in the North Atlantic in 1991 to create the greatest storm
in recorded history. (The tempest was depicted in the recent movie The
Perfect Storm.)
"When it comes to the perfect storm of diabetes, all the conditions are
right," says Dr. Bernard Zinman, a professor of medicine who heads the
division of endocrinology and metabolism at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto.
One contributing factor is that the massive baby boom generation is moving
into its 50s, when the risk of diabetes normally increases. Another contributor
to the storm is the current climate of what he calls "overnutrition" –
the consumption of unhealthy fast foods and super-sized portions, which
is driving up the rate of obesity, "a known risk factor for Type 2 diabetes,"
he says.
In
August of this year, U.S. researchers announced that they were ending
a large Type 2 diabetes prevention trial a year early, simply because
the findings were so definitive. (The results must still be published
and submitted to the peer-review process.)
Researchers with
the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
studied 3,234 men and women aged 25 to 85 who suffered from impaired
glucose tolerance – a condition that often precedes diabetes.
The trial included people who were obese and had a family history
of diabetes. Some also belonged to an ethnic group known to be at
higher risk for Type 2 diabetes.
The subjects were
randomly divided into three groups: one group was given a diabetes
medication called metformin, which decreases the amount of glucose
produced by the liver; the second received an inactive placebo drug.
(These two groups also received general health advice about exercise,
weight loss and diet.) Those in the third group did not take any
diabetes medication but attended a 24-week education program to
help them follow a low-fat diet combined with moderate exercise,
with the aim of reducing body weight by seven per cent.
After three years,
here's what the study found: on average, 11 per cent per year of
high-risk people who took the placebo had developed Type 2 diabetes,
compared with 7.8 per cent per year of those who took metformin
and 4.8 per cent per year of those who had changed their eating
and exercise habits. Put simply, even modest changes in diet and
exercise reduced the risk for Type 2 diabetes by more than half.
"[The findings]
demonstrate that lifestyle changes can benefit a broad range of
high-risk patients," says Dr. Lawrence Leiter, a professor of medicine
and nutritional sciences who heads the division of endocrinology
at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto. "It's also the first study
to show that taking a drug – in this case, metformin –
also reduces diabetes risk."
The Glycemic Index, developed at U of T, offers
a dietary plan for controlling diabetes
Diabetes
is a complex condition that researchers are still trying to unravel.
In basic terms, the disease impairs the way food is processed into
the glucose that fuels our bodies. People with Type 2, or adult-onset,
diabetes continue to produce their own insulin, the all-important
hormone (secreted by the pancreas) that regulates glucose. But for
some mysterious reason, in Type 2 diabetes this delicate hormonal
balancing act falters, and blood glucose rises to unhealthy levels.
(In Type 1, or juvenile, diabetes, the body stops producing insulin
altogether.)
According to Dr.
Thomas Wolever, a diabetes researcher and professor in the department
of nutritional sciences, the goal of diabetes management is to bring
blood-glucose levels into the healthiest possible range via proper
nutrition, physical activity, regular glucose monitoring, the use
of oral medications and/or insulin as required and stress reduction.
One aspect of proper
nutrition involves making the best possible food choices, says Dr.
Wolever. Twenty years ago, he and colleague David Jenkins, a professor
of nutritional sciences and director of the Clinical Nutrition and
Risk Factor Modification Centre at St. Michael's Hospital, developed
the Glycemic Index (GI) system, which ranks a wide variety of foods
according to how they affect blood-glucose levels in the body. Foods
low on the index (such as barley, pasta, parboiled rice, oatmeal
and whole-grain pumpernickel bread) produce a gradual rise in blood
sugar, which is easier on the body; foods high on the index (such
as mashed potatoes, white bread, many cold breakfast cereals and
crackers) cause blood-glucose and insulin levels to spike, which
may be harmful. (For more information, read The Glucose Revolution:
The Authoritative Guide to the Glycemic Index, or check out
www.glycemicindex.com).
Several studies have
found that people newly diagnosed with diabetes who learn to follow
the GI system tend to make healthier food choices and have better
blood-glucose and lipid (blood fat) levels than those who follow
traditional dietary advice. Some research suggests that choosing
foods low on the index may reduce a person's risk of developing
Type 2 diabetes in the first place.
Although the Glycemic
Index system is currently recommended by the World Health Organization
and other expert bodies, its use is somewhat controversial. Some
doctors feel the system is too complicated for patients; others
argue that the real problem for those with Type 2 diabetes isn't
the glycemic nature of what they eat, but rather that they are consuming
too many calories.
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