American
Diabetes Association peddling nutritional nonsense while accepting
money from manufacturer of candy and sodas
The American Diabetes Association (ADA) recently announced a three-year,
multi-million dollar alliance with Cadbury Schweppes Americas Beverages
(CSAB) to help combat obesity and diabetes in America by stressing
the importance of making smart nutritional choices.
According to an ADA press release sent to national media outlets,
CSAB will support local and national ADA programs, such as "America's
Walk for Diabetes" and "Weight Loss Matters." The
release does not state, however, that the CSAB will be permitted
to use the ADA logo on its diet soft drink products in exchange
for this multi-million dollar contribution.
While the ADA and CSAB have published releases putting a positive
spin on their alliance, many public interest groups have some problems
with the partnership. Although CSAB is only allowed to print ADA's
logo on its diet sodas, it is still the third-largest soft drink
manufacturer in the world and a major producer of sugary candy.
Both categories of products contribute to the United States' problem
with obesity and diabetes.
Gary Ruskin, executive director of Oregon-based Commercial Alert,
a website that monitors commercial culture, called the ADA's partnership
with CSAB "corrupt" and demanded that the contribution
be returned to CSAB immediately. "If Cadbury Schweppes really
wanted to reduce the incidence of obesity and diabetes, it would
stop advertising its high-sugar products, and remove them from
our nation’s schools," said Ruskin. "This is just
another attempt by a major junk food corporation to obfuscate its
responsibility in the epidemic of obesity and diabetes in the United
States."
Another public interest group, the Corporate Crime Reporter (CCR),
recently published an interview with Richard Kahn, the ADA's chief
medical and scientific officer. CCR asked Kahn, "Why exactly
is the ADA taking money from big corporate donors, including junk
food pushers?" Kahn revealed that the association's so-called "multi-million
dollar" alliance was actually only slightly more than one
million dollars. In exchange for that sum of money, Cadbury-Schweppes
can put the ADA's label on all of its diet soda products. According
to Kahn, however, CSAB cannot use the association's logo on any
product not nutritionally approved by the ADA, nor on any product
specifically marketed toward diabetics.
Despite the terms of the alliance, in a press release posted on
www.beverageworld.com, CSAB Senior Vice President of Marketing
Jim Trebilcock implied that products with the ADA logo will be
marketed toward diabetics. "I acknowledge that it is a little
bit of a tricky dance here, given that we also sell sugared beverages," says
Trebilcock, "but it's about communicating the choice. And
it's also really about doing the right thing. And the right thing
is we do offer products that are great for diabetic patients or
people who are overweight and we want to get that message out,
but done in a way that contributes to an overall solution."
When CCR asked Khan why ADA takes money from food companies at
all, he replied, "If we want to prevent diabetes, reduce the
prevalence of obesity, help find the cure for diabetes, we have
to get funds from someplace." Khan further added that the
ADA was not promoting any of CSAB's products, including those carrying
ADA's logo. It seems possible, however, that the public might be
misled to believe that ADA does in fact promote products carrying
its logo, such as common Schweppes' diet beverages Diet Dr. Pepper,
Diet Snapple and Diet Rite.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of this alliance is the evident
change in the ADA's stance on obvious diabetes-promoting substances
such as sugar. The strong connection between sugar and diabetes
has been commonly accepted among the medical public. However, when
CCR stated that sugar is connected to diabetes, Khan quickly denied
the link, saying, "What is the evidence that sugar itself
has anything to do with diabetes? There is no evidence. There is
not a shred of evidence that sugar, per se, has anything to do
with getting diabetes."
The ADA's website even features supposedly safe ways for diabetics
to consume sugar on its "Sweeteners and Desserts" page. "If
you have diabetes, that doesn’t mean you can’t eat
sweets. People with diabetes can eat desserts, use sweeteners,
and still keep their blood glucose (sugar) levels in their target
range," the site reads. "In the past, people with diabetes
were warned to avoid sugar. Experts believed eating sugar would
rapidly increase blood glucose, resulting in levels that were too
high. Some people even thought eating sugar caused diabetes, an
idea that we know now isn’t true. Research has shown that
sugar has the same effect on blood glucose levels as other carbohydrates."
Khan's statements denying that sugar can cause diabetes came in
the same week that the Journal of Pediatrics published a study
blaming much of childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes on over-consumption
of sugary sodas. The study found that sugared sodas contribute
about 20 teaspoons of sugar per day to the diets of American teenagers.
Although he did not state that sugar is connected to diabetes,
Khan did admit that weight is connected to diabetes. Khan said
that calories (not sugar) are connected to the disease, and that
weight is simply a measure of calories in and calories out. According
to Khan, whether those calories come from sugar, fat or protein
is unimportant. If more calories go in than come out, obesity will
occur, which can lead to the onset of type 2 diabetes.
Throughout the interview, whenever CCR made a connection between
sugar, or sugary soda, and diabetes, Khan quickly mentioned a different,
equally bad or even worse food for diabetics than sugar or soda,
referring to foods such as bacon cheeseburgers or doughnuts. Khan
also repeatedly pressed the idea that the ADA only approved of
diet and sugar-free foods and drinks, such as CSAB's diet sodas,
which contain aspartame, a substance highly debated for its safety.
When CCR asked for the ADA's official position on the safety of
aspartame, Khan replied, "I don’t think that there is
any artificial sweetener on the market that has been shown to be
unsafe."
Russell L. Blaylock, MD, author of "Health and Nutrition
Secrets" disagrees. Dr. Blaylock writes, "Diabetics who
drink large amounts of aspartame-sweetened drinks are more likely
to go blind. Aspartame is composed of the excitotoxin aspartic
acid, methanol (also a known eye toxin) and the amino acid phenylalanine.
Given this evidence, then, why do the American Diabetes Association
and thousands of doctors encourage their diabetic patients to use
aspartame? At least where the American Diabetes Association is
concerned, it may have something to do with the fact that the organization
has received large monetary contributions from Monsanto, the manufacturer
of NutraSweet®!"
This forms an interesting cycle. The ADA gets money from Monsanto
and, suddenly, no research can be found on the negative effects
of aspartame. Although the ADA website assures readers that sugar
is actually safe for diabetics to consume and that there is no
research to the contrary, it specifically urges diabetics to replace
sugar with artificial sweeteners. "The low-calorie sweeteners
in the United States all underwent extensive testing before they
were approved," the ADA site reads. "Results showed that
low-calorie sweeteners are safe for everyone, including children
and pregnant women." Similarly, the ADA has now accepted money
from CSAB, and no research can afterwards be found on the negative
effects of sugar. While this change in attitude appears suspicious,
Khan did admit that type 2 diabetes has become an "epidemic" and
that childhood type 2 diabetes is a "serious problem."
According to "Life without Bread" authors Christian
B. Allan and Wolfgang Lutz, "Diabetes is currently the only
noninfectious disease designated by the World Health Organization
as an epidemic. The International Diabetes Federation and the American
Diabetes Association estimate that more than 15 million people
in the United States and at least 100 million people worldwide
have type 2 diabetes."
Diabetes is an epidemic of frightening proportions. What can be
done? According to Khan, little to nothing. The ADA publicly supports
Senator Ted Kennedy's (D -- Mass.) proposed legislation restricting
children's access to junk food during school via vending machines,
but Khan said that the ADA would not outright support an additional
tax on sodas as Tennessee, Arkansas and West Virginia have already
done. According to Khan, the problem of obesity cannot be solved
by singling out soda for taxation over other junk foods, such as
cheeseburgers and doughnuts.
Although the ADA does not actually support taxing soda, the association
does support "considering" taxation. After all, who's
to say which foods deserve to be taxed? Khan explained, "Before
anyone starts taxing anything, we ought to look at the entire food
supply and ask: Can we distinguish good foods from bad foods?" Many
scientists seem to believe we can, and they seemed to have unanimously
condemned soda to the "bad foods" category.
Perhaps other questions need asking, such as: Why accept money
from companies that raise the question of ethics within the ADA?
Why should the public trust an organization to designate good nutritional
choices when that very same organization makes an alliance with
and accepts money from a junk food company? Regarding the financial
aspect of this issue, Khan said that only seven percent of the
ADA's total budget comes from large corporations. Is seven percent
of a $215 million budget worth calling many years of research and
public trust into question? Better yet, is the slightly more than
a million dollar contribution from CSAB worth it?
The ADA claims that its objective in the partnership with CSAB
is to put Cadbury Schweppes' money to use in programs educating
the public about diabetes and proper foods; yet, 30 to 40 percent
of the ADA's budget already goes to prevention and education programs,
according to Khan. Is it worth risking the denigration of ADA's
ethical standing for less than two million dollars from CSAB? According
to Larry Ellingson, the ADA's Chair of the Board, it is. He says, "CSAB
is taking an important step by demonstrating that a company can
lend its infrastructure, marketing tools and consumer connections
to assist an organization like ADA in extending the reach of its
messages. We hope this will serve as a model for other industries."
A model? Ruskin sure hopes that's not the case. In fact, he's
disgusted with the ADA's actions enough to elicit a comparison
to the phony defenders of the tobacco industry. “Saying that
sugar has nothing to do with diabetes is like saying that tobacco
has nothing to do with emphysema,” said Ruskin. “The
American Diabetes Association has been so corrupted that they have
sunk to the mentality of ‘tobacco scientists’ who denied
the link between tobacco and lung cancer.”
The experts speak on sugar and diabetes
In the early 1800s the per capita consumption of sugar (sucrose)
was about 12 pounds a year. Today in the United States, the per
capita consumption of sugar is more than 150 pounds a year. For
every person who consumes only 5 pounds of sugar, there is another
who eats 295 pounds annually (Challem et al. 2000).
Disease Prevention And Treatment by Life Extension Foundation,
page 662
In countries where people eat a diet low in fat and sugar and
high in whole foods such as unrefined grains and fresh fruits and
vegetables, diabetes is almost nonexistent. When they move to the
U.S., their diabetes risk skyrockets. Tragically, as Western "nutrition
free" processed and fast foods such as McDonalds®, and
soft drinks such as Coca-Cola® and Pepsi® are introduced
to Third World countries, their rates of diabetes are rapidly rising.
It is estimated that by the year 2010, some 40 percent of Americans
65 or older will have adult-onset diabetes.
Prescription Alternatives by Earl Mindell RPh PhD and Virginia
Hopkins MA, page 405
Refined sugar, and simple sugars (corn syrup, honey, maple syrup,
white grape juice concentrate, etc.) in general, place stress on
our blood sugar control and other body control mechanisms. When
high-sugar foods are eaten alone, blood sugar levels rise quickly,
producing a heightened release of insulin. Eating foods high in
simple sugars is usually harmful to blood sugar control—especially
in hypoglycemics and diabetics. Sugar also has a detrimental effect
on mood, premenstrual syndrome, and many other health conditions,
especially when combined with caffeine.
Encyclopedia Of Natural Medicine by Michael T Murray MD Joseph
L Pizzorno ND, page 54
The glut of sugar can also cause kidney disease, eye problems,
and severe nerve damage to the lower limbs and other parts of the
body. (People with diabetes account for more than 50 percent of
the lower limb amputations performed in the United States each
year.)
Alternative Cures by Bill Gottlieb, page 212
White refined sugar, or sucrose, drains your liver, imbalances
your adrenal glands, overtaxes your nerves, and depletes your B
vitamins. It contributes to allergies, arthritis, premenstrual
syndrome, and abnormal hormonal fluctuations in both women and
men. It is the root cause of functional hypoglycemia (low blood
sugar). It accelerates the onset of adult diabetes (high blood
sugar). Perhaps most commonly, by setting up the body's energy
level to hit a false peak and then crash back down, it causes chronic
fatigue and an unstable metabolism.
Food Swings by Barnet Meltzer MD, page 42
The people who make those awful bottled "natural" fruit
drinks and teas aren't going to like this, but it's possible that
the steep rise in our consumption of high-fructose corn syrup has
contributed to the rise in diabetes by depleting chromium. (As
our consumption of high-fructose corn syrup has risen 250 percent
in the past 15 years, our rate of diabetes has increased approximately
45 percent in about the same time period.) According to studies
done at the Agriculture Department's Human Nutrition Resource Center,
fructose consumption causes a drop in chromium, raises LDL "bad" cholesterol
and triglycerides, and impairs immune system function.
Prescription Alternatives by Earl Mindell RPh PhD and Virginia
Hopkins MA, page 418
When the pancreas becomes exhausted by the constant demand of
producing insulin to convert all that sugar into heat and energy,
it finally malfunctions and the excess sugar then pollutes the
bloodstream. And without sufficient insulin to process glucose,
the body is deprived of an essential food and the diabetic remains
hungry no matter how much he or she eats. Sugar accumulates in
the bloodstream faster than the body can excrete it through the
urine, and the victim is literally poisoned. He becomes tired,
weak, nauseated, and depressed. Sugar also plays havoc with our
teeth. It feeds the bacteria normally present in the mouth, causing
them to multiply. This leads to plaque formation, cavities, and
gum disease.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 39
Does sugar contribute to diabetes and coronary heart disease?
Dr. John Yudkin, considered one of the world's leading authorities
on sugar in the diet, concludes that the trouble sugar causes goes
considerably beyond tooth decay and extra pounds. For example,
sugar causes irregularities in the insulin response; sugar causes
diabeteslike damage to the kidneys; it contributes to degeneration
of the retina; it raises blood fat levels; and it increases the
stickiness of the blood platelets, a common precursor of heart
trouble.
Complete Guide Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 110
Dr. James Anderson at the University of Kentucky Medical School
popularized the high complex carbohydrate, high fiber diet for
the treatment of diabetes. With this diet, about 70% of diabetic
patients were able to stop insulin and oral diabetic therapy. This
program of bread, pasta, fruit, and vegetables works because fat
interferes with the action of insulin while high carbohydrate foods
intensify the action of insulin. Beans seem to be particularly
effective in this diet. The carbohydrates used must be natural.
Whole-wheat flour is good; white flour is bad.
A Physicians Guide To Natural Health Products That Work By James
Howenstine MD, page 113
You might think that replacing white sugar with honey, molasses,
and other "healthy" sweeteners is the way to go. Unfortunately,
just like refined white sugar, almost all natural sweeteners have
a high glycemic index and provoke a sharp glucose release. The
one "natural" sweetener that is low on the glycemic index
is fructose. However, fructose poses problems of its own, especially
for diabetics. It is a primary culprit in glycosylation, the chemical
binding of sugars to proteins, which, as I explained in the first
chapter, is one of the mechanisms behind the cascade of complications
in diabetes.
Reversing diabetes by Julian Whitaker MD, page 125
High sugar intake increases adrenal activity 10-12 times (causing
high blood sugar itself). Excess Calorie, fat, and sugar consumption
leads to Insulin resistance. An estimated 2/3 of diabetes is from
overweight, obesity and high blood sugar leading to fewer Insulin
receptor sites. Remedial low Calories means less Insulin and more
Insulin receptor sites. High blood sugar causes Zinc deficiency,
lowered healing. Under stress/Mineral deprivation, the body can
catabolize up to 50% of its own Protein tissues for breakdown to
sugars. High blood sugar with acidosis from deficiency of intrinsic
Insulin causes deposits in blood vessels precursing Brain stroke
and/or heart attack; and is usually accompanied by hepatic/liver
disease that prevents Protein assimilation in the liver, assimilable
forms of Amino acids, and Insulin-building Amino acids in the pancreas.
Anti-Aging Manual by Joseph B Marion, page 243
As your blood sugar rises, all sorts of things can go wrong with
your body. But many of these complications take years to develop.
High blood sugar makes your blood sticky, and this stickiness can
trigger many biochemical changes. Most notably, it increases the
number of free radicals, unstable oxygen molecules that damage
your blood vessels and clog them with cholesterol-rich deposits.
This process, called atherosclerosis, sets the stage for heart
disease, kidney failure, eye problems, and a nervous-system condition
called diabetic neuropathy.
Blended Medicine by Michael Castleman, page 11
Chromium is so important in helping glucose travel from the bloodstream
to the cells that adequate amounts may really help your condition
if you suffer from hypoglycemia or diabetes. In fact, there is
evidence that one contributing factor in the development of a blood
sugar disorder is an imbalance or malfunction of your chromium-insulin
mechanism. If you suffer from hypoglycemia, your problem is that
you produce too much insulin, with a corresponding quick drop in
blood sugar. Perhaps your body is responding to a diet of refined
carbohydrates (sugar and white flour), which do not supply enough
chromium for proper metabolism. If you have eaten such nonfoods
for a long time, your pancreas may simply be worn out from overproducing
insulin to cope with them, and at the same time your stores of
chromium may be depleted. The end result may be that your pancreas
has exhausted itself trying to keep up with your diet, and can
no longer produce insulin at all. You may then find yourself at
the next stage of blood sugar disorder: diabetes.
Complete Guide to Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 397
An article in Science magazine reported that the greatest cause
of cataracts is the body's inability to cope with food sugars.
The worst offender is lactose, followed by refined white sugar.
Simple sugars include: table sugar and corn syrup (sucrose), honey
(glucose), milk sugar (lactose), fruit sugar (fructose), and xylose,
the sugar-like substance often used to sweeten "sugar-free" diabetic
candies, chewing gum, and cookies. Recommendation: Sharply reduce
or even eliminate your intake of sucrose and xylose products. Let
the dietary sugars you do eat come mainly from fresh fruit and
dairy sources, keeping the total amount of even these sugars at
30% to 50% of your daily carbohydrate intake.
Doctors Complete Guide Vitamins Minerals by Mary D Eades MD, page
244
Any substance that can do the bodily harm that sugar can do is
obviously capable of contributing to the progress of major degenerative
diseases, too. For example, sugar alters both the blood sugar levels
and the body's normal response to insulin. These two changes are
commonly observed in victims of maturity onset diabetes.
Complete Guide to Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 108
White refined sugar is also a culprit in everything from common
colds and flu, bronchitis, sinus infections, and digestive difficulties
to breast cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and Candida. By weakening
the immune system, it increases the risk of degenerative illnesses
and infections. In addition to imbalancing the pancreas and liver,
it also attacks the central nervous system. It kills brain cells.
Avoid this vicious anti-nutrient in all its guises: candies, chocolates,
cake, ice cream, donuts, pastries, jams and jellies, and artificial
sweeteners such as mannitol, saccharin, Equal™, and Nutrasweet™.
And watch out for the refined white sugar present in brown sugar,
turbinado sugar, and high-fructose corn syrup.
Food Swings by Barnet Meltzer MD, page 46
Therefore any overconsumption of sugar—above all other things—is
very likely to precipitate not only diabetes in the first place,
but the still more dreadful coronary thrombosis in the second.
Complete Guide to Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 107
As your blood sugar levels increase, all sorts of things go wrong
in your body. Basically, all that extra sugar gums up your blood
vessels, setting the stage for the major complications of type
2 diabetes: heart disease, stroke, eye problems (including blindness),
kidney failure, nervous system impairment, and wound infections
or ulcers (often requiring foot or leg amputation).
Anti-Aging Prescriptions by James Duke PhD, page 342
Sugar-sweetened soft drinks and confections are not permissible
for prediabetic or diabetic patients, but the alternative, artificially
sweetened beverages and foodstuffs, may not be either. Allegations
have implicated aspartame as a potential risk factor for several
disorders, although this remains a controversial issue. Many artificial
sweeteners (marketed as a sugar substitute) may actually contain
sugar, masquerading as dextrose and maltodextrin.
Disease Prevention And Treatment by Life Extension Foundation,
page 663
Caffeine raises blood sugar levels and disrupts the blood sugar-regulating
effect of insulin. In fact, high-dose caffeine administration (the
equivalent of six cups of coffee) has been shown to produce transient
insulin resistance that is very similar to Type II diabetes.
Caffeine Blues By Stephen Cherniske MS, page 199
High levels of glucose or other sugars in the blood frequently
damage the eyes, leading to cataracts or damage to the retinas.
Damage to the kidneys or nerves is common in those with diabetes,
and the risk of heart disease is much higher.
The Omega Solution by Jonathan Goodman ND, page 164
The obese diabetic may first notice strange things happening to
his or her feet; they may tingle, or they may be numb. When they
are bruised or scratched, they may take a long time to heal. This
is because excess sugar in the blood has damaged vital nerve endings
and, in the worst case, caused atherosclerosis, leading to reduced
blood flow to the limbs. The consequent numbness can mask a severe
injury, which can become infected, eventually leading to gangrene
and amputation.
Fat Land by Greg Critser, page 141
The average American consumes about 150 pounds of sugar each year.
This accounts for 550 to 650 calories a day, or almost three pounds
per week. In 2001, Americans spent $21 billion on candy alone—more
than the gross national products of Lithuania, Costa Rica, and
Mozambique combined, according to the Tufts University Health and
Nutrition Letter. The empty calories in sugar contribute directly
to overweight, diabetes, tooth decay, and overall poor health.
One in twenty of the world's adult population now has some form
of diabetes, a disease associated with obesity, poor eating habits,
and a sedentary lifestyle. More than half of American adults are
overweight. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) relates that the incidence of type 2 diabetes (formerly known
as adult-onset diabetes) has risen by 33 percent in the past decade
and three out of every fifty American adults currently have this
diet-related condition. Complications related to diabetes are the
sixth leading cause of death in the United States.
Prescription For Dietary Wellness by Phyllis A Balch, page 205
People who are hypoglycemic or diabetic shouldn't risk the blood
sugar swings that caffeine causes. Decaf can still affect a sensitive
person's blood sugar levels. Diabetics can run a simple experiment
on themselves by testing their blood sugar before and after a cup
of decaf coffee and watching the blood sugar rise then fall within
several hours. Hypoglycemics need only to observe their energy
levels dip one to two hours after drinking decaf to realize that
no coffee is the best choice for them.
Caffeine Blues By Stephen Cherniske MS, page 305
After eating sugary low-fiber foods like doughnuts in the morning,
there is a reactive low blood sugar phenomenon later in the day,
often experienced as the afternoon "slump." Fiber foods,
on the other hand, help stabilize blood sugar by slowing down the
release of sugars and insulin. This reduces the highs and lows
of sugars and insulin. In this way, fiber foods protect against
risk factors for diabetes, and help maintain optimal energy throughout
the day.
Healthy Digestion the Natural Way by Dr Lindsey Berkson, page 25
Diabetes was a very rare illness in the United States in 1880,
with only 2.8 persons out of every 100,000 having diabetes. Now
at least 10% of the populace has diabetes and when you look for
early signs of diabetes (hyperinsulinemia) that number is certain
to be much higher.
A Physicians Guide To Natural Health Products That Work By James
Howenstine MD, page 96
People with diabetes who take chromium should be under medical
supervision, since their insulin dosage may need to be reduced
as blood sugar drops.
Healing With Vitamins by Alice Feinstein, page 30
Refined sugar, because so many nutrients are removed from it,
is believed to be more likely to produce diabetes than unrefined
sugarcane, which is rich in the glucose tolerance factor, chromium.
Investigators tell us that even though the South African diet is
rich in raw sugarcane, diabetes is rare among the workers who cut
and eat it daily. This may also be due to the fact that the sugar
is eaten in its high-fiber natural state, or that these workers
are exercising strenuously each day.
Complete Guide Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 123
Bleached white flour: Not only have the bran and germ been stripped
away, but bleached flour also contains a substance from the flour
bleach (alloxan) which causes diabetes in animals. Unbleached white
flour should also be avoided since it is stripped of essential
nutrients.
The Enzyme Cure by Lita Lee with Lisa Turner & Burton Goldberg,
page 123
Fructose is a highly reactive molecule that readily attaches to
proteins, changing their structure and interfering with their normal
activity. Studies show that fructose accelerates glycosylation,
damaging proteins to a significantly greater degree than sucrose
or glucose." Yet we consume this harmful sweetener like it
is going out of style. In a highly processed form (high-fructose
corn syrup), it is the primary ingredient in soft drinks, sales
of which have gone through the roof in recent years. More than
25 percent of the beverages Americans consume are sodas. In 1997
Americans purchased 14 billion gallons of "liquid candy"—more
than 576 12-ounce servings per person per year!
Reversing diabetes by Julian Whitaker MD, page 125
There is no doubt that the refined oils, hydrogenated fats, and
a severe lack of the Omega 3 fatty acids are contributing to our
diabetes epidemic. The control of blood sugar depends on adequate
amounts of the minerals zinc, chromium, vanadium, and magnesium,
which are lacking in the foods grown in soil treated with Phosphorus,
Nitrogen, and Potassium fertilizer used by most farmers. We are
being poisoned by pesticides, lack of essential fatty acids, toxic
trans fat isomers and toxic additives. Diabetics have the additional
problem that they are losing large quantities of minerals and vitamins
in their urine whenever their blood sugars are elevated.
A Physicians Guide To Natural Health Products That Work By James
Howenstine MD, page 100
Studies have shown that people who exercise cut their risk of
developing Type 2 diabetes by 24 percent. That's because exercise
is insulin's best friend: It lends a helping hand, moving sugar
out of the bloodstream and into the cells.
Alternative Cures by Bill Gottlieb, page 212
Alcohol, caffeine and fruit juices have the same affect on the
glucose. We caution all diabetics to avoid not only sugar, but
caffeine as well. One cup of coffee can elevate the glucose level
enough to need three units of insulin to counteract it.
It's All In Your Head By Hal A Huggins DDS, page 84
Fat, especially saturated fat, may be as dangerous for diabetics
as sugar. Frequent small meals and the use of olive oil instead
of butter or cheese may help control blood-sugar and cholesterol
levels. Type I diabetics must coordinate the timing of meals with
insulin administration.
Graedons Best Medicine by Joe Graedon & Dr Terasa Graedon,
page 318
Diabetes is all about sugar—the sugar in our bodies known
as blood sugar or blood glucose. Every cell in our bodies must
have a constant source of glucose in order to fuel metabolism.
Our cells use glucose to power processes such as growth and repair.
When we eat a meal the digestive system converts much of our food
into glucose which is released into the bloodstream. The hormone
insulin, which is secreted by the pancreas gland, moves glucose
from the blood and funnels it into the cells so it can be used
as fuel. If the cells are unable to get adequate amounts of glucose,
they can literally starve to death. As they do, tissues and organs
begin to degenerate. This is what happens in diabetes.
Healing Miracles of Coconut Oil by Bruce Fife ND, page 109
Fructose is a natural monosaccharide that occurs in fruits and
honey. In whole fruit, it is an excellent energy source. Pure fructose
may be derived from fruit, but this is not financially expedient.
Commercial fructose is available in either liquid or crystal form.
Liquid fructose is made by splitting the two components of corn
syrup. High-fructose corn syrup may contain as much as 55 percent-sucrose
and (diabetics, please note) it requires insulin for its metabolism.
Crystalline fructose is made from intensely refined cane and beet
sugar.
New Whole Foods Encyclopedia by Rebecca Wood, page 136
Sugar is another dietary disaster.. In addition to causing dental
caries [cavities], depressing the immune system, and providing
a lot of empty calories that contribute to weight gain, sugar has
other detrimental effects, especially for diabetics.
Miracle Of Stevia by James A May, page 226
When you eat starch, sugar, or protein, your body breaks down
and absorbs the nutrients in the food, and your blood sugar rises.
This rise in blood sugar signals your pancreas to produce and release
insulin, the hormone that acts to return your blood sugar to normal
by driving it into the tissues to be used or stored. In some people,
the rise in blood sugar stimulates the release of too much insulin,
which drives too much blood sugar into the tissues, leaving the
level in the blood too low. In medicine, we call this condition
hypoglycemia. When the blood sugar swings wildly, first hurtling
upward then plummeting too low, you may suffer symptoms of nausea,
clammy sweats, dizziness, muscle cramping, and even fainting. We
refer to these unpleasant symptoms accompanying the falling blood
sugar level as "reactive" hypoglycemia. Symptoms come
not from the low level itself but from the rapid change. A stable
low blood sugar— one that's low but is always about the same
degree of low—rarely causes symptoms. People with overactive
insulin and reactive hypoglycemia often develop adult-onset diabetes
mellitus
Doctors Complete Guide Vitamins Minerals by Mary D Eades MD, page
382
People with diabetes should eat at least three meals a day at
regular intervals to keep their blood sugar levels within normal
range. Meals and snacks that combine carbohydrates with proteins
or fats will have the longest-lasting effects on blood sugar levels
because protein and fat take longer to raise blood sugar than carbohydrates
do.
Foods That Fight Disease by Laurie Deutsch Mozian MS RD, page 47
In fact, U.S. government statistics for this time period clearly
demonstrate that along with the dramatic decrease in dietary fat
intake (from forty percent to thirty-three percent of our caloric
intake) there was also a dramatic increase in the intake of refined
carbohydrates, not only sugar but white flour. There is no doubt
in my mind that this increase in refined carbohydrates has been
spurred by the media attention given to the Food Guide Pyramid,
created by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which made six to
eleven daily servings of these wheat derivatives the basis of the
pyramid. I believe that the Food Guide Pyramid's recommendations
have directly contributed to the twin epidemics of obesity and
diabetes we now face in this country.
Dr Atkins New Diet Revolution by Robert C Atkins MD, page 13
For diabetics, excess sugar becomes a toxin in the system clogging
up the respiration of cells and preventing the kidney from doing
its job.
Building Wellness with DMG by Roger V Kendall PhD, page 136
Excess sugar consumption can suppress the immune system; upset
the body's mineral balance; produce an acidic stomach; and cause
hyperactivity, anxiety, concentration difficulties, and heart disease
(by raising insulin levels), as well as fatigue, weight gain, depression,
and arthritis. According to Nancy Appleton, Ph.D., author of Lick
the Sugar Habit (Avery/Penguin Putnam, 1996), there are seventy-eight
metabolic consequences to eating sugar. Dietary sugars feed harmful
intestinal yeasts, toxic organisms, fungi, and all forms of cellular
cancer. Bill Misner Ph.D., sports nutritionist and author, has
said, "Because sugar is devoid of vitamins, minerals, fiber,
and has such a deteriorating effect on the endocrine system, major
researchers and major health organizations (American Dietetic Association
and American diabetic Association) agree that sugar consumption
in America is one of the three major causes of degenerative disease." The
rise in type 2 diabetes cases in young people is so great that
experts are calling it an "emerging epidemic."
Prescription For Dietary Wellness by Phyllis A Balch, page 205
In the early stage of this illness, high levels of insulin are
a warning that eventually high blood sugars will appear. Elevated
cholesterol and triglyceride values, obesity, hypertension, and
the clinical appearance of vascular damage are all clues that point
toward a pre-diabetic state.
A Physicians Guide To Natural Health Products That Work By James
Howenstine MD, page 105
The risk of diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and cancer can be
reduced through the simple act of substituting whole grains for
refined grains. Refined foods such as white flour and white rice
are stripped of the fiber and nutrients that whole grains still
possess. The first word on the label must be whole—don't
be fooled by artificial brown or caramel coloring.
Prescription For Dietary Wellness by Phyllis A Balch, page 108
Man-refined sugar is eight times as concentrated as flour, and
eight times as unnatural—perhaps eight times as dangerous.
It is the unnaturalness that deceives the tongue and appetite,
leading to overconsumption. Who would eat 5 pounds of sugar beets
a day? Yet the equivalent in refined sugar is a mere 5 ounces.
Sugar Blues by William Dufiy, page 217
Studies have shown that biotin supplementation can be helpful
for improving blood-sugar control in both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
Natural Physicians Healing Therapies by Mark Stengler ND, page
58
The human body was not designed to handle the amount of refined
sugar, salt, saturated fats, and other harmful food compounds that
many people in the United States and other Western countries feed
it. The result is that a metabolic syndrome emerges: elevated insulin
levels, obesity, elevated blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels,
and high blood pressure.
Encyclopedia Of Natural Medicine by Michael T Murray MD Joseph
L Pizzorno ND, page 554
Convincing evidence shows how large amounts of refined and concentrated
sugars overwork the pancreas, causing wide swings in blood sugar
levels.
Bartrams Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine by Thomas Bartram, page
241
Yudkin tells us that the kidney is damaged identically by either
a high sugar intake or by inducing a diabetic state. We know this
because laboratory experiments using rodents have accomplished
that astonishing result. These alterations were actually seen by
routine biopsy as well as by microscopic and electron-microscopic
methods.
Complete Guide Health Nutrition by Gary Null, page 108
Coronary disease has heretofore been regarded as a "complication" of
diabetes. Both coronary disease and diabetes have a common cause:
White sugar and white flour.
Sugar Blues by William Dufiy, page 218
Type II diabetes usually occurs after the age of forty-five, frequently
in overweight people, and ranges in severity from mere insulin
resistance to insulin dependence. Occasionally, children are diagnosed
with type II diabetes. It frequently can be controlled with diet
and exercise. It is diagnosed when two consecutive blood tests
taken while fasting reveal that the level of blood sugar is 126
mg/dl (milligrams per deciliter) or higher.
Foods That Fight Disease by Laurie Deutsch Mozian MS RD, page 143
Many of us have heard that if sugar were to attempt now to pass
the FDA approval process it would not be approved. The March 1993
issue of the TOWNSEND LETTER FOR DOCTORS gives us an idea as to
why this is so. They give a list of ways in which sugar is known
to be harmful. The reactions they list are: immune system suppression;
mineral imbalance; hyperactivity; rise in triglycerides; reduces
defenses against infection; reduces high density lipoproteins;
chromium an copper deficiency; cancer of the breast, ovaries, intestines,
prostate and rectum; increases fasting levels of glucose and insulin;
interferes with absorption of calcium and magnesium; weakens eyesight;
raises serotonin; causes hypoglycemia; produces stomach over-acidity;
increases adrenalin levels; produces anxiety, irritability and
difficulty concentrating; aging; alcoholism; tooth decay; obesity;
contributes to duodenal and gastric ulcers; arthritis; asthma;
Candida albicans (yeast infections); gallstones; heart disease;
appendicitis; multiple sclerosis; hemorrhoids; varicose veins;
elevates glucose and insulin responses in conjunction with the
use of contraceptives; periodontal disease; osteoporosis; decrease
in insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance; decrease in growth
hormone; increases cholesterol and systolic blood pressure; drowsiness
and decreased activity; migraine headaches; food allergies; contributes
to diabetes; toxemia during pregnancy; eczema, and it interferes
with protein absorption.
PROZAC Panacea or Pandora by Ann Blake Tracy PhD, page 327
There is some evidence that a high consumption of sugar-sweetened
foods may lead not only to impotence and premature ejaculation,
but to unrealistic sexual attitudes and expectations, strong urges,
strange fantasies, and even crimes of sexual violence.
Food And Healing by Anne Marie Colbin, page 300
90 percent of Type II diabetics [are] obese. Even in nondiabetic
individuals, large body-fat gains often result in carbohydrate
intolerance, higher blood insulin, and insulin insensitivity in
body tissues. Progressive insulin insensitivity is now thought
to be the main factor in the development of this most common type
of diabetes. Many obese diabetics are able to restore normal blood
sugar levels simply by achieving ideal body-fat level.
Herbal Defense by Ralph T Golan ND, page 25
The whole problem of sugar was compounded by the low-fat messages
we were wrongly bombarded with during the 1980s and 1990s. To make
a low-fat product taste good, manufacturers add lots of sugar.
Now, in the United States, the aisles in the supermarket are crammed
with low-fat or diet cookies and crackers, ice cream, frozen cakes
and pies, soft drinks and white bread filled with sugar. The United
States has "low-fatted" and "dieted" itself
to a raging epidemic of obesity and diabetes.
Dr Atkins New Diet Revolution by Robert C Atkins MD, page 23
Type 2 diabetes is strongly associated with a lack of exercise
and a poor diet—one that's low in fiber and high in sugar,
fat, and animal products. It develops slowly, usually over several
years, and rarely produces dramatic symptoms. For this reason,
many people with type 2 diabetes have no idea that they are sick.
In fact, the American diabetes Association (ADA) estimates that
only half of Americans with type 2 diabetes have been diagnosed.
Blended Medicine by Michael Castleman, page 232
Although no recommended dietary allowance (RDA) has been established
for chromium, at least 200 mg each day appears necessary for optimal
sugar regulation. Chromium levels can be depleted by consuming
refined sugars or white flour products, and by lack of exercise.
Encyclopedia Of Natural Medicine by Michael T Murray MD Joseph
L Pizzorno ND, page 418
Nearly 15 million Americans have to contend with this condition.
Excess sugar in the blood damages the arteries and veins and can
lead to fatal heart disease and stroke. (The death rate for middle-aged
people with Type 2 diabetes is twice that of middle-aged people
who do not have it.)
Alternative Cures by Bill Gottlieb, page 212
Excessive consumption of sugar has recently been identified by
some researchers as the single most important dietary risk factor
for heart disease in women.
Reversing diabetes by Julian Whitaker MD, page 124
...the pesticides and chemicals sprayed on cane and beet sugar
and the chemical bleaching process used to make "white" sugar
are potentially hazardous; we are not advised about this on sugar
packages or food labels.
Staying Healthy With Nutrition by Elson M Haas MD, page 463
Avoid fats, cholesterol, and sugar and keep your weight down to
help prevent diabetes, which affects the heart.
Heart Disease by Burton Goldberg, page 242
The high blood sugar levels that characterize diabetes need to
be controlled and kept within normal limits to reduce the long-term
complications of chronic high blood sugar—premature cardiovascular
disease, kidney disease, and vision problems.
Foods That Fight Disease by Laurie Deutsch Mozian MS RD, page 144
The ability to maintain normal blood sugar levels is jeopardized
by the lack of chromium in our soil and water supply and by a diet
high in refined white sugar, flour, and junk foods.
Prescription For Nutritional Healing by Phyllis A Balch CNC and
James F Balch MD, page 27
Adult-onset diabetes is a severe imbalance of this system. It
is the common form of the disease, correlated with overweight and
inactivity, the result not of decreased production of insulin but
of increased resistance to its effects.
8 Weeks To Optimum Health By Andrew Weil MD, page 237
One of the most valuable aspects of buckwheat is its ability to
help control blood sugar levels in people with adult-onset diabetes,
the most common form of the disease.
New Foods For Healing by Selene Yeager, page 96
In our experience, almost everyone benefits from carbohydrate
restriction, even if they have had Type 2 diabetes for years and
are taking drugs to lower their glucose levels.
Life Without Bread by Christian B Allan PhD and Wolfgang Lutz MD,
page 47
Diets high in simple sugars such as glucose and fructose rob the
body of chromium, while those high in complex carbohydrates such
as pasta preserve it.
Food Additives by Ruth Winter MS, page 124
Excessive sugar consumption is believed to be involved in a host
of very common problems: hypoglycemia or hyperinsulinism, diabetes,
heart disease, dental caries, high cholesterol [and] obesity.
Food And Healing by Anne Marie Colbin, page 190
Sugar has no nutritional value and is directly harmful to your
health. Despite vociferous attempts to defend it, there are studies
that clearly show how harmful (and even deadly in the case of diabetics)
its effects can be.
Dr Atkins New Diet Revolution by Robert C Atkins MD, page 23
When people have diabetes, either they're not making enough insulin
to get the glucose into the cells, or the insulin fails to "unlock" the
cell and let the sugar enter. Why wouldn't the insulin be able
to "unlock" the cell? The most common culprit is obesity.
When too many fat cells crowd in next to other cells, they can
block the area where the insulin "key" is supposed to
fit. Then the "key" can't get to the lock, so even if
plenty of glucose is available, the cell can't get it.
Green Tea by Nadine Taylor MS RD, page 63 |
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