A closer D-look at Australian Dietary Guideline 3

Delicious snacks can fit easily into Guideline 3 with a little help from your friends <3

To date we’ve covered quite a few topics from our Australian Dietary Guidelines including Guideline 1‘Diabetes and healthy weight with a twist’, Guideline 5‘Food safety – a major consideration in the heat of the Aussie summer’, and a few from Guideline 2 – eating a wide variety from the 5 food groups: , 2 blogs on dairy foods (1 and 2), water, wholegrains, legumes, protein, and there’s more to come in this area. So today I thought we’d look at Guideline 3 which is particularly important for those of us with diabetes. It is:

“Limit intake of foods containing saturated fat, added salt, added sugars and alcohol”

Of course the reasonings behind this guideline are based on solid evidence about the relationship of these types of foods with heart health issues and other chronic health conditions that are also strongly associated with higher risk factors for those of us with diabetes. I don’t want to be negative and lecture you on how bad these foods are, but rather remind you about how to avoid them and show how swapping them for better options will help to keep our hearts, diabetes control and general wellbeing in good working order, whilst still allowing us to enjoy treats every now and then.

A good starting place would be to have a quick read over of a couple of previous Diabetes Counselling Online blogs including ‘Energy In/Energy Out – understanding how much you need and where you get it’, and ‘Confused about fats & sugars? The answer is not black and white’.

Guideline 3 has the most words of all the guidelines because it explains 4 different parts. We’ll take a quick look at the 4 parts, and I’m sure we’ll return to many of them in future blogs too:

1. Limit intake of foods high in saturated fat such as many biscuits, cakes, pastries, pies, processed meats, commercial burgers, pizza, fried foods, potato chips, crisps and other savoury snacks.

– Replace high fat foods which contain predominantly saturated fats such as butter, cream, cooking margarine, coconut and palm oil with foods which contain predominantly polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats such as oils, spreads, nut butters/pastes and avocado.

– Low fat diets are not suitable for children under the age of 2 years.

2. Limit intake of foods and drinks containing added salt.

– Read labels to choose lower sodium options among similar foods.

– Do not add salt to foods in cooking or at the table.

3. Limit intake of foods and drinks containing added sugars such as confectionary, sugar-sweetened soft drinks and cordials, fruit drinks, vitamin waters, energy and sports drinks.

4. If you choose to drink alcohol, limit intake. For women who are pregnant, planning a pregnancy or breastfeeding, not drinking alcohol is the safest option.

It really important that we remember that we eat whole foods rather than specific nutrients, and don’t get hung up on those specific nutrients but understand how eating fresh minimally processed foods will contribute to our greater wellbeing. Dr David Katz explains this point very well in a recent article he wrote for the Huffington Post where he goes into some detail on this point. I encourage you to read it as his words make very good sense.

And last week’s blog on Protein & Diabetes – do you get the balance right? explained that: “As we can add 2.5 serves of ‘discretionary’ choices to our daily food intake, the protein section is a good area to add one or two extra serves from, as from a diabetes point of view protein doesn’t have much effect on our blood glucose levels and will save us from getting hungry and potentially damaging our wellbeing plan. Remember to beware of the processed ones!“

The Guidelines tell us that “Discretionary foods should only be consumed sometimes and in small amounts. While discretionary foods can contribute to the overall enjoyment of eating, often as part of social activities and family or cultural celebrations, if their intake is not reduced, most Australians need to greatly increase physical activity to ‘burn up’ the additional energy (kilojoules) from discretionary foods to help achieve and maintain a healthy weight (see Guideline 1).”

Now I’ll quickly run through the 4 areas that we’re watching in Guideline 3 (more detail can be found in the guidelines document here):

1) Saturated Fat

The best advice comes straight from the guidelines: “The Guidelines are realistic and practical, allowing a small amount of unsaturated oils and spreads to reflect culinary behaviour, while ensuring that the energy these foods provide are within the total energy constraints of the diet. Dietary fat included in the Foundation Diets comes mainly from fish, lean meats, poultry and milk, yoghurt and cheese products, with a small allowance of unsaturated oils/fats/spreads. Where more energy is required in moving from Foundation to Total Diets, additional serves of these and/or other foods containing fats can be included, such as additional nuts and seeds, unsaturated spreads and oils, and/or discretionary foods.

“However, where possible, the best choices are foods where unsaturated fats exist in greater quantities than saturated fats. As well, people who are shorter, smaller or sedentary may have little or no scope within their usual dietary patterns for any discretionary foods and drinks. The extra energy (kilojoules) provided by these foods and drinks is an additional reason to limit them.”

I won’t go into more detail than this on the topic of fats, as there’s just too much to cover. I hope though that you have a good feel that if you’re adding discretionary choices to your everyday diet, you’re better off adding from the 5 food groups than including processed and sweetened foods and drink that will not add any nutritional benefit to your intake.

2) Salt

You’ll notice that the week before last with Salt Awareness Week covered the sodium issues in some detail in the first half of the blog ‘Twin reasons for d-awareness this week: salt and coeliac’. I encourage you to re-read that as there were many tips included.

3) Sugars

As people with diabetes we are usually quite aware of sugars in our diets, and my previous Diabetes Counselling Online blogs on the glycemic index will help you if you’re not sure here. I would say this one’s pretty obvious for us, so I won’t go into more detail than sharing what the guideline says:

“Sugars are carbohydrates – examples include fructose, glucose, lactose and sucrose. When sugars occur naturally in foods such as fruit, vegetables and dairy products, they are referred to as intrinsic sugars. However, the major source of sugar in the Australian diet is sucrose from sugar cane that is added to foods and is termed extrinsic sugar. Sucrose is widely used in processed foods and drinks as a sweetener and also plays a role as a flavour enhancer and preservative.”

I also like this sentence from the guidelines (other than for hypo treatments of course!): “From a nutritional perspective, good health can be achieved without the addition of sugars in any form to the diet.”

4) Alcohol

The guidelines explain best that: “For many people, an alcoholic drink is a regular and enjoyable part of meals. In terms of nutrition, alcohol is uniquely the only substance that is both a food providing energy and a drug affecting brain function. For these reasons, advice on alcohol is included in these Guidelines.

“Drinking alcohol has health, social and economic costs and benefits for both individuals and populations. There is some evidence that people who drink small quantities of alcohol may have better health outcomes than those who do not drink, but such findings have been challenged. Heavy drinking has no health benefits and studies consistently report that abstainers have better health outcomes than heavy drinkers.”

This topic of alcohol really needs a blog of its own to do it justice, so I’ll just finish here with the paragraph from the guidelines that is aimed at people with diabetes:

“As alcohol and hypoglycaemia have independent but additive effects on cognitive function and behaviour, it is recommended that people with type 1 or type 2 diabetes abstain from alcohol if they plan to drive. Alcohol worsens medical conditions associated with diabetes, such as liver disease, hypertension and advanced neuropathy. People with type 1 or type 2 diabetes may need to take special precautions when drinking and should discuss alcohol use with a health professional.”

Making the Swap to healthier choices

There’s quite a lot of support out there if you’re looking for help to cut down on these elements of your diet. Of course, the obvious choice is to see an Accredited Practising Dietitian who will walk through your eating pattern with you and make suggestions to suit your personal tastes and medical requirements.

The Dietitians Association of Australia provides a helpful resource that offers Ten Smart Swaps For Every Occasion. They also have a section on the website called Smart Eating For You, including this terrific list of Smart Eating Tips.

Diabetes Counselling Online provides a free e-counselling service to all Australians with diabetes and their friends and families, so you can register on our website to do that. You can also join in with one of our closed Facebook groups such as ‘Diabetes & Food – let’s celebrate it!’ or ‘Diabetes Weight Matters’ where you’ll find me around as their Social Media Dietitian. These groups are very popular as the members also have awesome ideas to help you make some healthier swaps.

I think that covers Guideline 3, but you can see there’s lots of extra reading in there to come fully up to speed with it. This again reinforces the importance of having personalised consultations with an Accredited Practising Dietitian.

In the meantime, please let me know here or on the Facebook groups if you have any queries, or would like any parts explained in greater detail. It would be my pleasure. :)

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It’s all in your p.o.v..changing perspectives

Today is likely to be one of the hottest days on record in Adelaide. It is also going to be the hottest day of any city in the world today, according to the forecasters. How do people handle something like this?

The answer lies largely in how people are situated, and what their outlook on life is.

My neighbours, who are a group of single men living in a Share House with a couple of bedroom airconditioners, were out early this morning polishing the old Mercedes when I went for my ‘diabetes stroll’. We exchanged a few words re the weather, and one of them said, ‘We’re off to Africa, it’s cooler there! Want to come with us?” Here is my mental image of what my day would look like if I’d accepted..

Africaaa
Africaaa

The Adelaide City Council has opened the air conditioned city bus shelter 24 hours all week, & invited the homeless to sleep there. They are providing free cold water. The Charities are working hard too, free lunch & a movie every day. And some of the homeless are cheerfully heading to the free Libraries after the movie, so they can stay in the a/c there. The city is doing its best to look after the less fortunate. I saw a homeless man last night on the TV news being interviewed- he was remarkably cheerful, optimistic, & resilient in his outlook.

Throughout the State, Volunteers are donning fireproof clothing, or volunteering to provide drinks & food for firefighters. With a number of firefronts to manage, people are managing on minimal sleep & in appalling conditions to ‘serve & protect’ the lives & property of strangers. How do they keep it up?

In their personal lives, people are offering help to family, friends & strangers. They are providing shade & water for wild birds & animals, sharing taxis with strangers & space in their homes for neighbours without a/c. They are calling elderly relatives with reminders to ‘keep cool, keep drinking’. They are voluntarily using less electricity in their homes by cooling only necessary areas, in order to avoid the dreaded ‘load shedding’ that threatens.

I have been thinking about this today in the context of the Global online diabetes community. More and more I am seeing the support given to other ‘people with diabetes’: by strangers to each other, simply because we share a common bond: we have diabetes, or we are caring for someone with diabetes- or both. Because it’s one thing to be a caring Health professional, & very important too. And it’s another thing to be able to ‘speak with’ and be heard by ‘someone like me’- someone who is also living this Diabetic life, every single day. Some of this occurs on Twitter, with many Diabetes related online communities. Others are comfortable on ‘bookface’, & we have special interest groups which you may find helpful yourself. Some are Open groups, you can simply join. Others are ‘closed’: that is for the protection of its members, who feel comfortable sharing worries & advice with others who are similarly placed with respect to diabetes. With the ‘closed’ groups, you can request to join, and a group Admin wil review your public profile, & possibly send you a clarifying question by PM.

Here are some of them:

diabetes.counselling

MenWithDiabetes

pregnancyparentingdiabetes

diabetesandfood

parents

diabetesweightmatters ; ruraldiabetes/

You may be just the person who is needed in a Group: your perspective on your diabetes might be just what someone else needs to hear: we are all different, & we are all the same. No matter what type of diabetes you have, or how long you have had it, in this century, in the times we live in, we Diabetics have never been more connected with each other. We can give and find support like no one before us in the History of the World has been able to.

” All of us are human beings first. We are all sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad; worry and wonder what life is all about.

Then, we are people living with diabetes” Helen Edwards

All of us are human beings first. We are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, bothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad, worry and wonder what life is all about. – See more at: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/uncategorized/people-politics-and-pancreases/#sthash.GANsISUe.dpuf(people politics and pancreases)

(people, politics, and pancreases)

Helen Wilde

Helen has been the mother of a Type 1 diabetic since 1979, and has had Type 2 diabetes herself since 2001. She has been a Senior Counsellor with www.diabetescounselling.com.au since 2002.

 

of us are human beings first. We are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, bothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad, worry and wonder what life is all about. – See more at: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/uncategorized/people-politics-and-pancreases/#sthash.GANsISUe.dpuf

All of us are human beings first. We are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, bothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad, worry and wonder what life is all about.

Then, we are people living with diabetes.

– See more at: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/uncategorized/people-politics-and-pancreases/#sthash.GANsISUe.dpuf

All of us are human beings first. We are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, bothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad, worry and wonder what life is all about.

Then, we are people living with diabetes.

– See more at: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/uncategorized/people-politics-and-pancreases/#sthash.GANsISUe.dpuf

All of us are human beings first. We are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, bothers, sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and lovers. We all laugh, cry, get angry, sad, worry and wonder what life is all about.

Then, we are people living with diabetes.

– See more at: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/uncategorized/people-politics-and-pancreases/#sthash.GANsISUe.dpuf

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Diabetic Heart Disease: be aware, what to do & the good news

Some people who have diabetic heart disease (DHD) may have no signs or symptoms of heart disease.

This is called “silent” heart disease.

Diabetes related nerve damage that blunts heart pain may explain why symptoms aren’t noticed.

Thus, people who have diabetes should have regular medical checkups. Tests may reveal a problem before they’re aware of it. Early treatment can reduce or delay related problems.

Some people who have DHD will have some or all of the typical symptoms of heart disease. Be aware of the symptoms described below and seek medical care if you have them.

If you think you’re having a heart attack, call 000 right away for emergency care. Treatment for a heart attack works best when it’s given right after symptoms occur.

Symptoms

A common symptom of coronary heart disease (CHD) is angina. Angina is chest pain or discomfort that occurs if your heart muscle doesn’t get enough oxygen-rich blood.

Angina may feel like pressure or squeezing in your chest. You also may feel it in your shoulders, arms, neck, jaw, or back. Angina pain may even feel like indigestion. The pain tends to get worse with activity and go away with rest. Emotional stress also can trigger the pain.

See your doctor if you think you have angina. He or she may recommend tests to check your coronary arteries and to see whether you have CHD risk factors.

Other CHD signs and symptoms include nausea (feeling sick to your stomach), fatigue (tiredness), shortness of breath, sweating, light-headedness, and weakness.

Some people don’t realize they have CHD until they have a heart attack. A heart attack occurs if a blood clot forms in a coronary artery and blocks blood flow to part of the heart muscle.

The most common heart attack symptom is chest pain or discomfort. Most heart attacks involve discomfort in the center or left side of the chest that often lasts for more than a few minutes or goes away and comes back.

The discomfort can feel like uncomfortable pressure, squeezing, fullness, or pain. The feeling can be mild or severe. Heart attack pain sometimes feels like indigestion or heartburn. Shortness of breath may occur with or before chest discomfort.

Heart attacks also can cause upper body discomfort in one or both arms, the back, neck, jaw, or upper part of the stomach. Other heart attack symptoms include nausea, vomiting, light-headedness or sudden dizziness, breaking out in a cold sweat, sleep problems, fatigue, and lack of energy.

Some heart attack symptoms are similar to angina symptoms. Angina pain usually lasts for only a few minutes and goes away with rest. Chest pain or discomfort that doesn’t go away or changes from its usual pattern (for example, occurs more often or while you’re resting) can be a sign of a heart attack.

If you don’t know whether your chest pain is angina or a heart attack, call 000 right away for emergency care.

Not everyone who has a heart attack has typical symptoms. If you’ve already had a heart attack, your symptoms may not be the same for another one.

Also, diabetes-related nerve damage can interfere with pain signals in the body. As a result, some people who have diabetes may have heart attacks without symptoms.

Just recently HG reported: “Sooo… I had a new hypo symptom last night. Tight feeling in shoulders, chest and lower neck (above the boobs and below the head). Kinda like when you are really cold and you can feel your body contract. There was no shortness of breath but it was a very strange sensation and a little scary. I was at 2.4 with 1.8 units on board so I was certainly headed for disaster. I had to eat/drink 75 g of carbs to get into the safe level… I thought for sure I’d wake up sky high but was at 6.7 this morning.”

The best advice in this situation is to call an ambulance. Getting treatment immediately may prevent the need for heart surgery if it is a heart attack. Turning up at your local Emergency department and being told it is not a heart attack is good news.

Turning up at your Dr’s surgery a week later with more and more pain, being told you have had a heart attack and now you need surgery, is not good news. Nor is collapsing and at risk of death.

Another client of mine had ONLY some mild shortness of breath on his walk from the car park to his endocrinologist’s surgery. As he walked in the door he collapsed, resuscitated by his endocrinologist and other doctors in the surgery. Lucky man. Parking another 100m away might have put his life at risk.

 

men wheels pic

Good News

The good news is that heart disease is largely preventable.

There is no single cause for heart disease, but there are risk factors that increase your chance of developing it.

Non-modifiable risk factors

  • increasing age
  • having family history of heart disease

Modifiable risk factors:

  • stop smoking
  • check and treat cholesterol levels
  • check and treat blood pressure
  • check and treat BGL’s over target
  • follow a healthy meal plan
  • follow a safe and effective daily exercise program
  • have an assessment for depression and anxiety, and seek counseling if required

chinese man laptop

Article abstract from Endocrinol Metab (Seoul). 2013 Sep;28(3):169-177.

High Density Lipoprotein: A Therapeutic Target in Type 2 Diabetes.

“High density lipoproteins (HDLs) have a number of properties that have the potential to inhibit the development of atherosclerosis and thus reduce the risk of having a cardiovascular event. These protective effects of HDLs may be reduced in patients with type 2 diabetes, a condition in which the concentration of HDL cholesterol is frequently low. In addition to their potential cardioprotective properties, HDLs also increase the uptake of glucose by skeletal muscle and stimulate the synthesis and secretion of insulin from pancreatic β cells and may thus have a beneficial effect on glycemic control. This raises the possibility that a low HDL concentration in type 2 diabetes may contribute to a worsening of diabetic control. Thus, there is a double case for targeting HDLs in patients with type 2 diabetes: to reduce cardiovascular risk and also to improve glycemic control. Approaches to raising HDL levels include lifestyle factors such as weight reduction, increased physical activity and stopping smoking. There is an ongoing search for HDL-raising drugs as agents to use in patients with type 2 diabetes in whom the HDL level remains low despite lifestyle interventions.”

One of the most important things you can do is talk to your doctor about your risk of heart disease.

Heart disease is not always obvious and often there are no symptoms.

That is why it is so important when you next visit your doctor to have your risk factors measured – whether or not you think anything is wrong with you.

Some days it seems impossible- but then you do it :-)
Some days it seems impossible- but then you do it 🙂

A Real Life Story By Murray Webb

“This is My personal experience Friday 13th July 2012

“The Day My Diabetes Nearly Killed Me”

{I am not writing on behalf of Heart Foundation or Diabetes Australia. This is My personal experience}

Hello to the person reading this article. You may be at home, in a waiting room, on a train/tram or in a car. I am sharing this, “My Story“, with you, in raising awareness of heart disease. Also to help researchers find an answer to life’s health conditions Let me introduce myself, my name is Murray Webb, I live and work full time in Glenorchy, Tasmania. I am type-2 diabetic. I am SURVIVOR of a SILENT heart attack.

It was on Friday 13th July 2012, that had changed my life. I had just finished my shift at the bakery. I arrived home, got changed for my casual job as Patient Transport Officer with St John Ambulance Tasmania. My colleague had come to pick me up to go to the hospital to collect the patient to be transported. As we were travelling into the city, I started to sweat profusely around my face, also got mild pressure in the chest and some left shoulder blade pain. I just put it down to rushing around or may be muscular aches. I didn’t think it was serious. (In hindsight, they were the warning signs of a heart attack)

My diabetes nearly killed me

As a Volunteer with St John Ambulance of 17 years, I knew the signs/symptoms of a heart attack. As a type-2 diabetic, I also knew I was at risk of having a heart attack. I have a family history of heart disease, (both parents succumbed to heart disease). As a diabetic, I did not experience the pain in the jaw, arm/s or tightness in the chest

Time had passed

It was nearly 24 hours since I had experienced the Warning Signs. The chest pain & other pain had not subsided. I went over to a friend’s house, said, that I may need to go to hospital to get checked out. Friend rang the hospital for advice, (HOSPITAL DO NOT GIVE ADVICE, as the staff concentrate on patients in Emergency Room) She was put through to Nurse-on-call, call centre, My signs/symptoms were taken and an ambulance was called. Once the Paramedic arrived, my observations were taken, pain relief administered, ECG machine attached. I was then transported to hospital. There, the nursing staff took bloods for testing, x-rays, further ECG’s. I think it was within an hour or so, the Doctor came back and told me that I had a heart attack. I was amazed, as I had NOT experienced the “classic signs” or “Hollywood heart attack”. Early on the Sunday morning of the 15th July, my chest pain became more intense. Five hours later I underwent an Angioplasty procedure. A non invasive procedure to insert 3 stents, then again four more stents on the day of Wednesday 18th of July. I have the utmost praise for the nursing staff that cared for me during my stay in hospital. I then took part in a six week cardiac rehabilitation program, consisting of gentle exercise and discussion topics, situated at the hospital. In reflecting on what happened, I now realise that if I left seeking medical help any later than I did. I know I would not be writing this now. I have accepted the fact that having suffered a heart attack. I may have another attack. Thinking back, “it still scares me that I could have died”.

I have taken part in a blood pressure research study at the Menzies Research Institute. I currently take part in a 5 year Cardiac research study for post Myocardial Infarction patients.

DO NOT DELAY

Diabetics DO NOT necessarily experience the “classic signs/symptoms” of a heart attack. Hence it is called a “silent “heart attack.

My advice to the people who may be at risk or those that may not think they are at risk of heart disease. Is PLEASE, asking your doctor/G.P. for a healthy heart check. Check out website: www.heartattackfacts.org.au or www.heartfoundation.org.au It is important to know the WARNING SIGNS. If you experience any chest pain, is to tell someone, call an AMBULANCE. Most important is DO NOT DRIVE YOURSELF TO HOSPITAL. Ambulance Paramedics can administer life saving drugs.

Do NOT delay in seeking medical help as any CHEST PAIN IS an EMERGENCY. It is OK to call triple zero (000) in Australia. If it is not a heart attack, then that’s a bonus. The longer one delays in seeking help, the more damage that is being done to your heart.

  • Did you know that 14 men die from a heart attack every day.
  • 14 women die from a heart attack every day.
  • Four Australian men have a heart attack every hour.
  • Each day 101 men have a heart attack.
  • Fifty-two Australian women have a heart attack each day.
  • 131 reported heart attacks a day, or one heart attack every 11 minutes. (In 2013 could be more)

Source: Heart Foundation”

(Thank you Murray for sharing your story.)

More information can be found @ http://www.heartfoundation.org.au/Pages/default.aspx

David – Diabetes Educator @ Diabetes Counselling Online

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prejudice, judgement & bias- who me? I’m a nice person! I know all about diabetes, right? Talkin’ WDD2013 blues

Today is World Diabetes Day, 2013. What is your wish for today? Mine is that through awareness and education, the prejudice, judgement and bias shown by media and ordinary people about those of us living daily with diabetes would come to an end. Or at least reduce. It’s also about the self education that those of us living with diabetes seek and need, to manage our diabetes well, and to deal with our own self blame.

So my wish is for Education.

I have personal experience of living with Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes and also gestational diabetes. My first darling daughter was diagnosed with Type 1 when I was 32 years old, a young mother. I was diagnosed with Type 2 at 52, and my beautiful second daughter with gestational when I was 61, and already a grandmother to 2 grandbabies from my Type 1 daughter. I have many relatives living with all types of diabetes. I have lived and breathed diabetes for 34 years. I frequently get angry or defensive when I see people with diabetes misrepresented or judged. 

Nobody chooses diabetes. 

Probably the biggest single judgement made is thinking ‘people cause diabetes by what they eat’. Yet many people eat indiscriminately themselves, not thinking, ‘should I eat that, it might give me diabetes’. They probably think, ‘I shouldn’t eat that, it might make me fat’, because that thought is about how we look in the mirror, not about our health.

My theory is, some of those people go on to develop diabetes, and then feel more ashamed and self blaming than they would if they understood how it all works. Sure, being overweight & not exercising & not eating a healthy diet are risk factors. But not everyone living like that will develop diabetes.

All children eat & drink sugar. All over the world. Yet only a small percentage of children develop type 1 diabetes. Those who do, need to eat sugar or glucose at times to balance their insulin intake, because it’s not a mathematical equation. People who think they know ‘all about’ diabetes, even some in the medical profession, will sometimes act as ‘experts’ and tell the Type 1 person, ‘you can’t eat that’.

Sugar does not cause diabetes. Sugar does not cause diabetes.

Read more about that here.

We are a food obsessed world. I cannot turn on my TV without coming across a cooking programme, every day. There are more restaurants & cafes in my hometown every day, including ‘pop ups’ ‘takeaways’ and ‘home deliveries’. Groceries can be ordered online and delivered to the home. We are in a time of Feasting in the Western world, alongside incredible famine in other places.

The big push for World Diabetes day this year has been about Prevention. This push is partly driven by the panic of governments world wide that the ‘epidemic’ of diabetes is threatening to be a huge financial drain on budgets.This has stirred up all kinds of guilt, anger, bias and prejudice, including within the Diabetes Community world wide.

There are some parents of children with diabetes wanting to revert to the old ‘Juvenile Diabetes’ name for Type 1 diabetes. It is true in this argument that there is as yet no way to Prevent Type 1 diabetes. However, this ignores the fact that adults are also diagnosed with Type 1, and that some people are now diagnosed with LADA,’late onset’, or type 1.5, or may have both types.

Type 2’s universally carry a heavy load of guilt, thinking ‘somehow I caused this to happen’. The implied judgement is, ‘You should have Prevented this’. It’s true that for some people with Pre diabetes, losing weight, watching their diet, & exercising will mean that they can prevent or delay their diabetes eventuating; or that for people with type 2, their diabetes will be controlled for a time (maybe a long time) without medication. It’s also true that they will probably progress through oral medication to insulin, if they live long enough. So ‘prevention’ is probably not the accurate word: it’s probably more accurate to talk about ‘delaying’; and only true about the onset of Type 2.

For all people with diabetes, the fear and risk of complications from poorly controlled diabetes is very real, and a daily battle. Prevention then can be used to mean Prevention of complications. This is the message of WDD2013 and the IDF that I would like to see people taking about, rather than the ‘prevention’ of diabetes itself. The Prevention (or delay) of Complications of diabetes.

This can be done by Educating people with diabetes, in a non judgemental way. Those of us with diabetes can be pro active in seeking self education, we are autonomous human beings, we can choose to find out what we need to know, and bring our Health care professionals, families, work colleagues and friends with us on the journey. People can be helped to manage their diabetes at an optimal level. That means, making and keeping appointments, monitoring & testing, eating, exercising & medicating. It also means looking after our Wellbeing.

These are the reasons why my wish is for ‘Education’ about diabetes; and that includes a wish that ‘Judgement’ & ‘self blame’ be removed. Who gets judged for having asthma? Motor Neurone Disease? Breast Cancer? Like many others, I have lost loved ones to all of these things. So why is diabetes different?

We are turning the World Blue for diabetes today, my wish is that this not be the ‘blues’ of Depression, up to 3 times more likely for pwd’s, but rather the blue of the blue blue skies, sunshine and optimism, the blue of Hope that insulin, oral medication, testing & monitoring, research, health care professionals, & above all Education, can bring to the whole world, one where diabetes is just one of many chronic conditions for which the sufferers are not blamed, and where everyone can be helped to live full, giving, and rich lives.

Helen Wilde

Helen is a long term Senior Counsellor with Diabetes Counselling Online, Teacher, mother of a type 1 diabetic for 34 years and a type 2 diabetic herself for 12 years.

You can get help from our team here: http://www.diabetescounselling.com.au/counselling-request/
You can also join our Chat, forums & chatline from the front page of the website.

A scratchy Jug Band rap from 1926 Talking Blues

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