Nuts and D-health

www.nutsforlife.com.au

Nuts-for-Life-logo-A2Nuts are a fascinating food, and for us with diabetes they tick so many of our healthy eating boxes – fibre, nutrients, good fats, satiety and more! Today we’ll take a closer look at the reasons behind all those good stories with a focus on our D-health (remembering to choose unsalted ones). It’s important to remember with blogs like this that focus on one food type, that foods should be incorporated into a healthy varied diet. I like these words of David L. Katz to illustrate this point: “Eat a diet of wholesome foods reliably associated with good health across a vast and stunningly consistent literature.”

First up I’d like to introduce the photo at the top of this blog, as it is the new logo for the ‘Nuts for Life’ campaign and we’re fortunate to show it here as they launch their new campaign to help educate Australians on the health benefits of regular tree nut consumption #healthyhandful.

Last week I was chatting with Nuts for Life Accredited Practising Dietitian, Lisa Yates, who suggested the key messages for us with diabetes are:

  • People with diabetes can and should eat nuts (unless you’re allergic of course!)
  • Nuts are a healthy snack that will help control BGLs as they have a GI lowering effect when eaten with carbs due to their healthy fat content
  • Cashews and chestnuts are the only nuts that contain enough carbs to be GI tested (needs a minimum 10g carbs per serve) and they have a low GI. Cashews average GI 25 and chestnut meal has been GI tested and was 54. Since GI is related to particle size it makes sense that whole chestnuts not grounded will also be low GI
  • Nuts also help with improving insulin sensitivity
  • People with diabetes have an increased risk of heart disease and eating a daily handful of nuts will help reduce the risk of heart disease while managing weight and cholesterol
  • People who are overweight can eat nuts they will not cause weight gain and if eaten in a calorie controlled diet will help with weight loss. This is because we don’t absorb all the fat in nuts about 20% is excreted as trapped in the fibrous structure of chewed nuts. Nuts eaters have more fat in their stools than non nut eaters. Nuts also contain fibre, protein and fat which all work on various aspects of appetite control. 30g per day is the recommended daily amount = #healthyhandful

I’ll look closer at some of these claims and the evidence behind them, as well as explaining how nuts fit within the Australian Dietary Guidelines (hereafter called ‘the guidelines’) and provide you with some recipe ideas to help include nuts on a daily basis.

www.nutsforlife.com.au
www.nutsforlife.com.au
www.nutsforlife.com.au
www.nutsforlife.com.au

According to the guidelines nuts fit into the protein foods section and 30g (a healthy handful) is one serve. If you’d like to read more about Protein and diabetes you can check out a previous blog here.

In terms of definition of a nut the guidelines offers this one: “A nut is a simple dry fruit with one or two seeds in which the ovary wall becomes very hard (stony or woody) at maturity, and where the seed remains attached or fused with the ovary wall. Most nuts are indehiscent (not opening at maturity). Any large, oily kernel found within a shell and used in food may be regarded as a nut. Examples include almonds, pecans, walnuts, brazil nuts, cashew nuts, chestnuts, hazelnuts, macadamia nuts, pine nuts and pistachio nuts. The term ‘nut’ is applied to many seeds that are not botanically true nuts. These may include cape seed, caraway, chia, flaxseed, linseed, passionfruit, poppy seed, pepita or pumpkin seed, sesame seed and sunflower seed.” Lots of choices here then!

www.nutsforlife.com.au
www.nutsforlife.com.au

The guidelines tell us: “There is evidence to suggest that consuming nuts (65–110g per day) is not related to risk of weight gain in the short term”, and that “consumption of nuts and seeds may help reduce the risk of heart disease and is not associated with weight gain if total energy (kilojoule) intake is controlled.”

It goes on to explain a key point that I was keen to make in this blog, that: “Nuts and seeds are rich in energy (kilojoules) and nutrients, reflective of their biological role in nourishing plant embryos to develop into plants. In addition to protein and dietary fibre, they contain significant levels of unsaturated fatty acids and are rich in polyphenols, phytosterols and micronutrients including folate, several valuable forms of vitamin E, selenium, magnesium and other minerals. They are nutritious alternatives to meat, fish and eggs, and play an important role in plant-based, vegetarian and vegan meals and diets.” There’s an awesome ready reckoner for nuts available from Nuts for Life that lists all the different nuts and the levels of nutrients each of them contains per 100g. It’s one of my favourite resources that I give to clients to help them understand more about the food they’re eating.

Further on the topic of helping with cholesterol, the guidelines say, “Nut consumption provides benefits by enhancing anti-inflammatory processes and lowering serum cholesterol possibly due to the presence of phytosterols, which reduce cholesterol re-absorption and/or the effects of shifting dietary fat quality, notably replacing saturated with unsaturated fat. Nut consumption is also associated with increased levels of adiponectin, which has anti-inflammatory and anti-atherogenic properties. Early work suggests that the delivery of components such as tocopherols and phenolic acids may help to reduce lipid peroxidation and oxidative DNA damage, and there is some indication that walnuts with a relatively high content of the amino acid L-arginine may have an effect on vasodilation through nitrous oxide pathways. Other nuts are also significant sources of arginine. Proposed mechanisms for effects on weight control include increased satiety, increased faecal fat excretion, increased thermogenesis and increased fat oxidation.” Pretty impressive facts to encourage nut consumption I’d say!

The guidelines advice for pregnant women and young children

It’s also important to note that “Nuts are a problem for small children as their size and consistency increases the risk of inhalation and choking. For this reason, they should not be given to children aged less than 3 years.” And that, “Pregnant and breastfeeding women do not need to avoid consuming nuts for fear of causing an allergic reaction in their babies. Only women who are allergic to these foods themselves need to avoid them.”

On the topic of improving insulin sensitivity, it’s a little complicated to explain in depth at this point other than to say it’s related to evidence about increased amounts of the anti-inflammatory mono-unsaturated fats in nuts that reduce inflammatory processes in the body, thereby allowing improved insulin sensitivity combined with lowering the GI of other carbs and increased satiety leading to weight loss. I have lots of research papers on the topic if you’d like to learn more – perhaps improving insulin sensitivity could be the topic of a whole blog one day? Please let me know if you’re interested and I’ll add it to my list! :)

Specifically related to Lisa Yates’ points about how they related to us with diabetes, Nuts for Life offers a free downloadable fact sheet entitled, ‘Nuts and Diabetes’ where you can read more at your leisure. They also have many other fact sheets and resources, as well as some delicious recipes. It’s definitely a site worth bookmarking as Lisa advised me this week that there are some great additions to it on their way in the near future.

www.nutsforlife.com.au
www.nutsforlife.com.au

Other good nut recipes sites include the Australian Healthy Food Guide and Taste.com.au but please remember that not all the recipes will be suitable for us with diabetes, so choose carefully.

There’s a FAQ page on the Nutrition Australia site that you may also like to view that includes some other interesting points that I haven’t gone into here.

Remember that it’s a good idea to check with your Accredited Practising Dietitian before making changes to your diet and to learn what the right amount of nuts for you personally is, and it’s good to go armed with some factual information. You can find an APD near you via the Dietitian’s Association of Australia website, or you can book in for an e-consult with our e-dietitian via our Diabetes Counselling Online website.

Wishing you improved D-health! Please let me know if you have any questions as usual, and I would love to hear how you include nuts in your day! Sally :)

Sally is the Social Media Dietitian with Diabetes Counselling Online, owner of her private practice (Marchini Nutrition), and has had type 1 diabetes for close to 40 years and coeliac disease for many years too.

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After the #party’s over: #guilt #regret #acceptance

10155802_10202193415533054_3134840172171383855_n

So, the Moveable Feast of Eostre, the goddess of spring fertility, is upon us once again. It’s Easter. We have a full moon, rabbits & chickens, chocolate & sweet fruit buns with a cross baked into the top. For some religions, there are other, more sombre & deeply significant symbols associated with this part of our annual calendar. For most of us, there are 4 days off work, at a time of year when the moon is full, when the day & the night are almost of equal length, with the equinox falling just under 4 weeks before Eostre in 2014, on March 20th. The weather is generally pretty ‘liveable’, whatever hemisphere of this bounteous Earth we are living in.

The stage is set for a time of rest & relaxation, of time with family & friends, of contemplation, & of feasting. In our Northern hemisphere heritage & tradition, even though we are now living in the Southern hemisphere, the annual cycle away from the darkness & deprivation of winter means it’s time to make special purchases of foods that we normally reserve for special occasions: weddings, parties, birthdays, anniversaries. Some observe religious abstinence of some food for part of this time; but all spend at least part of this time feasting.

For about 38 years, our Easter has involved spending time with our extended family. In the early days, these Easter gatherings were held at our house in a small inland country town. We actually sent out invitations, & at first our brothers & sisters & our own parents came, bringing children, the occasional great grandparent, & the occasional dog. We needed caravans & tents for everyone to be able to sleep under cover, & occasionally the bathroom & septic tank struggled to cope. Luckily we were only a short walk from the Public utilities. The cousins bonded for life.

Later, once we acquired our scruffy little fibro beach shack, all the growing cousins brought friends; girlfriends, boyfriends. Meals were mostly eaten outside, huddled away from the sea breezes in a cold year, or gloriously somnolent in sunshine in a warm year. That’s the thing about Easter: it’s a Moveable Feast, so the weather can be like the end of summer; or it can be like the beginning of winter; or even both. We still needed a caravan or a tent some years, but bunks, sofa beds, mattresses on the floor, two showers & an outdoor hose, & two toilets helped a great deal. The septic tank needed regular emptying.

I remember a lot of laughter from those years. For most of those 38 years we were at the beach shack, & our time was taken up with sandcastles, swimming, searching rock pools for little crabs, midnight Jetty fishing excursions, sailing, rowing in a kayak or canoe. Food was abundant of course, as were leftovers. We played cards with gum nuts for stakes, Coon can, Pontoon, snap.

Andrew's tender
Andrew’s tender

Nowadays our eldest daughter brings her family & we spend about 5 days at the shack. This year, because of the school holidays & other plans our family holiday ended on Good Friday. Traffic on the road to Adelaide was building up, & so they left before lunch today.

Our party this year included a full eclipse of the Moon, two red moons in a row, sunsets & dawns that were peacefully beautiful. Oh & the beginnings of a mouse plague. We swam in the sea, laughed, played games, built sandcastles & lego cities. We spotted our resident gecko, still skittering about inside the shack. We put down mouse bait, & threw out one little corpse. We enjoyed the fun of a 5 year old who wakes bursting with energy at 6.30 a.m. & wants to play baby pelicans (learning to fly & land) baby galahs, or baby seagulls. We enjoyed the seriousness of a tall 15 year old, who wants to share his thoughts & opinions about a myriad of topics. Both children are bursting with the joy of life.

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Sure, we did enjoy some great, simple, homecooked meals. We didn’t buy takeaway. We didn’t eat chocolate. We didn’t have any chocolate with us. There are 3 people with diabetes in our party, & we aren’t that fussed about chocolate anymore. After the party’s over, what happens? There are the mechanics to be gone through: cleaning up, working out what to do with leftovers, perhaps extra sheets & towels to wash, if you’ve had house guests as we’ve had. But there is no time to waste on regret, guilt, or ‘shouldn’t haves’. The motto of ‘Acceptance‘, ‘going with the flow’, is the mantra that my daughter repeated many times over the past 5 days. ‘Don’t sweat the small stuff’ in life, whether it’s about food, children’s behaviour, TV programmes, the timing of how a day runs on holiday. It’s OK to change your mind, & also to accept that in many cases whatever decision you make is just fine. Managing diabetes is organised, stressful. Reducing stress can be as simple as letting go of the ‘need’ to be the one who manages, who seeks to ensure that everything is covered. It’s actually OK for things on holiday to not be tightly planned & organised.

Technically,our party is over for this year. Last night I was woken from sleep at 1 a.m. by the sound of young girls laughing out the front. Now I hear the sound of other people’s holiday long weekend just starting. People have arrived, having made a long drive from somewhere. My elderly neighbour on one side is from the Adelaide Hills, & he is having a Prawn feast with his extended family, including a new great grandchild. His elderly red dog is resting outside in the shade. On the other side, the young family of the second son is cooking up a Sausage sizzle. Their dog is a middleaged lab, all protective when he needs to be, & all tail waggingly friendly when he doesn’t. Everywhere I hear children playing, birds calling, wind, the sound of the sea on the shore. Out the front, two little boys aged about 9 are walking past, wearing shorts & fleecy jackets.

We have decided to stay on a little. I have been very unwell, & am still moving more slowly than usual.There is a lot to do. We have no need to rush back to the city, where our daily lives are. And it’s still so beautiful here. Our original plan was to head back today, but slowly our plan evolved into a different one. Acceptance includes being flexible, open to what life brings.

happiness comes from letting go of guilt
happiness comes from letting go of guilt

carpe diem

Helen

Helen Wilde is a Senior Counsellor with Diabetes Counselling Online. She has been the parent of a person with diabetes since 1979, and has lived with Type 2 diabetes herself since 2001.

 

 

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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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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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Confused about fats & sugars? The answer is not black & white.

Australian Guide to healthy eating poster

The reason for my blog today is to try to help settle some of the confusion that has been stirred up recently in the media about fats and sugars to reassure our readers about their food choices to help avoid cardiovascular disease (CVD).

It is an important topic for us because diabetes has a very strong link with CVD. CVD is recognised as the major cause of death for people with diabetes, and in 2012 it was estimated that about 65% of all CVD deaths in Australia were in people with diabetes or pre-diabetes. Hence, the focus of diet and lifestyle to avoid it in our population. Click on the link to read more from the 2012 Baker IDI report on Diabetes: The Silent Pandemic and it’s effect on Australia.

This recent media frenzy (as far as I can work out) stemmed from an ‘opinion’ piece in the British Medical Journal about saturated fat. It was also discussed in the ABC’s Catalyst programme last week. Additionally, American, Dr David L. Katz, has written a blog about the controversy which I think addresses the various issues rather well in a balanced way.

Before we start though, I’d like to remind you about the recent (February 2013) launch of the Australian Dietary Guidelines that provides up-to-date advice about the amounts and kinds of foods we need to eat for health and wellbeing, and this is an excellent guide for us to follow. Before being published they underwent a three year review and development process and involved analysis of more than 55,000 research publications by extremely well qualified individuals and groups. For the Australian population they take into account nutrient requirements, cultural acceptability, Australian consumption patterns AND evidence for optimal health and wellbeing.

My own view as an Accredited Practising Dietitian is that fats and sugars, the macronutrients in question in this blog, are extremely complex. There are many types of fats, many types within those types of fats, and so forth, all with various qualities. The same goes for sugars. They are not ‘good’ or ‘bad’, and it is important to learn as much as possible about the varieties in order to empower us to make our own dietary decisions. This is difficult to do in one blog without oversimplifying matters, so I’ll keep it general.

In his blog this week, Dr David L Katz explains this aspect of saturated fats:

“Saturated fat is not one food component; it’s a category. Just as polyunsaturated fats include the anti-inflammatory omega-3s, and the pro-inflammatory omega-6s (and even that is over simplified), so does the saturated fat class contain a diversity of members. One of them, stearic acid, found in dark chocolate among other places, is now clearly established to be innocuous. Another, lauric acid, predominant in coconut oil among other places, may prove to be as well. But still others, such as palmitic acid and myristic acid, appear to be substantially guilty as charged, contributing to inflammation and atherosclerosis. The body of relevant evidence is expansive.

What this means is that even if there are harms attached to some saturated fats, summary judgment against the whole clan was never valid. The combination of parsing and over-simplification invites the devils in the details to run amok. That clearly happened here.

Some saturated fat simply isn’t harmful. Some is.”

Later in his blog, David continues, and I have bolded the words I’d like you to remember:

“If we focus only on cutting saturated fat, we can find new ways to eat badly. We have, over the years, done exactly that. Of note, we can do the same when cutting carbs, or gluten, or fructose, or sugar, or meat, or grains, or salt, or wheat, too. Diet never was, and never will be, a single ingredient enterprise. The whole recipe matters.

There is no need to obsess about cutting saturated fat. But I advise against any particular effort to add saturated fat to your diet. In fact, don’t waste much time focusing on saturated fat per se. Rather, focus on eating well, as the Okinawans have long done with a very low-fat plant-based diet, or as the Mediterraneans have long done with a much higher-fat, but still mostly plant-based diet. If we choose wholesome foods, we will wind up with better diets and better health. Incidentally, our saturated fat intake will not be more than moderate.”

And if you want to talk about sugar which was implicated in the Catalyst programme for causing CVD, again this has been far too over-simplified. In simple terms anyway we know that all carbohydrates break down to glucose (a type of sugar – a monosaccharide – that is our body’s preferred fuel source) and we know that carbs with a low glycemic index that are nutritionally rich are an important food source in our diets for many reasons. We also know that high-glycemic index and nutritionally poor carbohydrates can have a detrimental effect on the fat levels/types in our bodies, perhaps even as bad as ‘bad’ fats themselves. Just learn to choose nutrient-dense carb sources whenever possible.

As an Accredited Practising Dietitian I recommend sticking with the balanced diet that is provided to us in the very well researched and explained Australian Dietary Guidelines. If you’d like to hear that explained in more detail, I recently recorded a free one hour long webinar on ‘Healthy Eating with diabetes and coeliac disease’ that will do that for you.

Sally is the Social Media Dietitian with Diabetes Counselling Online, owner of her private practice (Marchini Nutrition), and has had type 1 diabetes for close to 40 years and coeliac disease for many years too.

 

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