
NB, this is a guest article as reported by the Mailonline.co.uk on Monday 26th December 2011.
A low calorie regime freed Paul from daily insulin injections and diabetes. ‘I’d developed diabetes in 2005 and had been injecting insulin twice a day since 2007,’ said Paul Dolby. Like many diabetics, Paul Dolby’s consultant was keen for him to lose weight, in order to gain better control of his condition. In June 2011, he was 15st 3lb and at 5ft 10 in, officially obese. The goal was for him to shed a stone by Christmas 2011. But Paul hasn’t just achieved this — he’s shed 2st 4 lb. Not only this, but his diabetes has improved so much that he no longer needs to inject himself with insulin twice a day and is on minimal medication to control his condition. Paul’s health has been transformed by a radical diet of meal replacement drinks and unlimited vegetables.
The diet was developed by researchers at the University of Newcastle to tackle type 2 diabetes — with impressive results. In the eight-week study involving 11 patients, all reversed their type 2 diabetes (they didn’t need medication any more). Three months later, seven patients were diabetes-free. ‘My wife Elizabeth was watching a TV news report about the diet and realised it might be suitable for me,’ says Paul, 49, who lives in Mold, North Wales. ‘I’d developed diabetes in 2005 and had been injecting insulin twice a day since 2007. ‘For reasons I couldn’t quite fathom, I’d also gained more weight since being diagnosed as a diabetic, even though I’d made steps to improve my diet. ‘As I’d given up smoking last year, I figured I had the willpower to give this diet a go.’
As Roy Taylor, professor of medicine and metabolism at the University of Newcastle, who led the study, explains: ‘It’s now clear that type 2 diabetes is caused by abnormal fat storage. If you are eating more than you burn, then the excess is stored in the liver and pancreas as fat. ‘On this diet, the mechanism is similar to what happens after bariatric surgery — the body is suddenly in negative calorie balance, so it calls on its own reserves of fat. ‘The fat used first is that around the pancreas and liver. This means the pancreas is given a chance to start working again.’
Alcohol was banned, while patients were encouraged to drink three litres of water a day. The fact that the diet seemed to reverse diabetes is what made it so appealing to Paul. As he recalls, his diagnosis in January 2005 had come as a shock. ‘Although looking back, I had all the classic symptoms — constant thirst and needing the loo all the time,’ says the father-of-two, who works in financial services. ‘The problem had clearly been my sweet tooth — I’d drink Coke during the day then buy three chocolate bars on the way home.’
Two weeks into Paul’s diet, his blood sugar readings were so improved that he no longer needed insulin. While sugar itself cannot cause diabetes, it is easy to eat lots of extra calories in sweet foods and drinks, explains Professor Taylor. Paul was initially put on metformin and told to watch his diet. But in 2007 he was told he would need to inject insulin twice a day. By June, he weighed 15 st 3 lb. ‘My health in general wasn’t great, either — my blood pressure and cholesterol were raised too, and this was the kick up the backside I needed,’ he says. ‘I took a huge lunchbox of vegetables to work and munched on carrots, cucumber, celery and sugar-snap peas throughout the day’. ‘I can honestly say that after the first couple of days, I was never hungry, but the lifestyle change was hard — no going to the pub or out for meals. ‘Elizabeth made delicious meals with the vegetables, so I didn’t have any cravings, except for chocolate.’
His hard work paid off.
Two weeks into the diet, his blood sugar readings were so improved that he no longer needed insulin. Paul is delighted he took the ‘cold turkey’ approach. ‘If it is really the case that an eight-week diet, has stopped me using and being reliant on insulin, then the potential impact of savings for the NHS should be shouted from the rooftops. ‘I believe the sacrifices I made were a small price to pay for a massive benefit to my health”.
GOLDEN Rule 1: Be Prepared and Control your Environment
GOLDEN Rule 4: Give up what Weakens You
GOLDEN Rule 7: Eat a Local, Balanced, Plant-Based Wholefood Diet
There is a vast amount of evidence that eating a plant-based wholefood diet lowers, and in some cases, reverses, heart disease and hypertension. This has been shown in the fasting studies, the chicken studies, the saturated fats studies, the fibre studies, the plant-based eating studies, and of course, the meat-is-directly-linked-to-heart-disease studies.
Nutrition Report: An Evaluation of NCD Prevention Research in the United States on Human Health
A healthy plant-based diet is simply mostly eating ‘plant-based wholefoods’ – such as apples rather than apple juice – as these are plant foods in their natural state, unrefined, and with their natural fibres, antioxidants, polyphenols, vitamins and minerals intact. Eat mostly plant foods, mostly wholefoods, and you receive the benefits, as the centenarian cultures do:
Healthy Plant-Based Diets – what does it mean – Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Plant-based diets are crucial as a solution to our health crisis
How plant-based diets can prevent non-communicable diseases (NCDs)
Practical tips for preparing healthy plant-based meals
Cancer
Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity and Cancer: a Global Perspective (the Third Expert Report – 2019) is a comprehensive analysis, using the most meticulous methods, of the worldwide body of evidence on preventing and surviving cancer through diet, nutrition and physical activity. It builds on the ground-breaking achievements of the First and Second Expert Reports, published in 1997 and 2007 respectively.
Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity & Cancer – A Global Perspective – Summary-third-expert-report
The Diabetes Pandemic – Part 1
Processed meat increases bowel cancer, diabetes and heart disease risk by 50%-200%
Asthma reduced by a high-fibre, plant-based diet
Eating meat linked again strongly to obesity
White meat like chicken is no better than red meat
Why do I recommend a balanced, healthy, plant-based wholefood lifestyle?
Chicken delivers weight gain – not weight loss
The scientific opinion on eating a plant-based wholefood diet
The Health Benefits of a Plant-Based Wholefood Diet
We are eating 10x more chicken and we are the most overweight people in the world…
Golden Rule 7: Eat a Local, Seasonal, Balanced, Plant-based Wholefood Diet.
Eating meat leads to type II diabetes and modern lifestyle cancers of the breast, bowel, prostate and lungs: References
Chicken, Meat, Weight Gain & Breast Cancer: References
Meat & Diabetes References:
- “Meat consumption and the risk of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies” by Aune D, Ursin G, Veierød MB as published in 2009 Nov;52(11):2277-87. doi: 10.1007/s00125-009-1481-x. Epub 2009 Aug 7, 2009, by researchers at the Department of Biostatistics, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, in Norway.
- Tonstad, S., Butler, T., Yan, R. and Fraser, G.E., ‘Type of vegetarian diet, body weight, and prevalence of type 2 diabetes.’ Diabetes Care, 2009, 32(5):791–796.
- “Dietary patterns, meat intake, and the risk of type 2 diabetes in women” by Fung TT, Schulze M, Manson JE, Willett WC, Hu FB, as published in the Archives of Internal Medicine 2004 Nov 8;164(20):2235-40.
- “A prospective study of red meat consumption and type 2 diabetes in middle-aged and elderly women: the women’s health study” by Song Y, Manson JE, Buring JE, Liu S from the Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, as published in Diabetes Care. 2004 Sep;27(9):2108-15. The study looked at 8.8 years’ worth of data (326,876 person-years of follow-up) on 37,309 participants in the Women’s Health Study.
- Steinmetz, K.A., et al., a review of over 206 epidemiological studies. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 1996, 96 (10):1027–39. Also see, Potter, J.D., ‘Vegetables, fruit, and cancer.’ Lancet, August 2005, 366(9485): 527–30. Also, Smith-Warner, S.A., et al., ‘Fruits, vegetables, and adenomatous polyps: the Minnesota Cancer Prevention Research Unit case-control study.’ American Journal of Epidemiology, 155(12): 1104–13, June 2002.
- Pan, An, et al., ‘Red Meat Consumption and Risk of Type 2 Diabetes: 3 Cohorts of U.S. Adults and an Updated Meta-Analysis.’ American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 10 August 2011.
- Pan, A, et al., ‘Changes in red meat consumption and subsequent risk of type II diabetes mellitus three cohorts of US men and women.’ JAMA Internal Medicine, DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.6633.
- Evans, W.J., ‘Oxygen-carrying proteins in meat and risk of diabetes mellitus.’ JAMA, DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.7399.
- “Red Meat Consumption and Risk of Type 2 Diabetes: 3 Cohorts of U.S. Adults and an Updated Meta-Analysis,” An Pan, et al., was published 10 August 2011 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The large study was led by An Pan, research fellow in the Harvard School of Public Health, Department of Nutrition, and Dr. Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health. The research included 37,083 men followed for 20 years in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study; 79,570 women followed for 28 years in the Nurses’ Health Study I; and 87,504 women followed for 14 years in the Nurses’ Health Study II.
- “Meats, processed meats, obesity, weight gain and occurrence of diabetes among adults: findings from Adventist Health Studies”, as published in Ann Nutr Metab. 2008;52(2):96-104 and Ann Nutr Metab. 2010;56(3):232., by Vang A, Singh PN, Lee JW, Haddad EH, Brinegar CH from the Department of Health Promotion and Education, School of Public Health, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA. This research was “a prospective cohort study examining the relation between diet and incident diabetes recorded among 8,401 cohort members (ages 45-88 years) of the Adventist Mortality Study and Adventist Health Study”.
- “Meat consumption and the risk of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies” by Aune D, Ursin G, Veierød MB as published in Diabetologia. 2009 Nov;52(11):2277-87. doi: 10.1007/s00125-009-1481-x. Epub 2009 Aug 7, 2009, by researchers at the Department of Biostatistics, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, in Norway. Åkesson, Agneta, et al., ‘Combined Effect of Low-Risk Dietary and Lifestyle Behaviours in Primary Prevention of Myocardial Infarction in Women.’ Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 167, No. 19, 22 October 2007.
- Study by the University of Washington School of Medicine was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2012. Nearly 50% of Native Americans develop diabetes by age 55. The researchers surveyed 2,000 Native Americans without diabetes from Arizona, Oklahoma and North and South Dakota about their diets. After five years, a follow-up survey found that 243 people had developed diabetes. Among the 500 people in the original study group who ate the most canned processed meat, 85 developed diabetes. In contrast, those who ate the least amount, just 44 developed the disease. The people who ate the most processed meats tended also to be heavier with larger waistlines. Canned meat is available freely to many Native Americans on reservations as part of the US Department of Agriculture food assistance program. Dariush Mozaffarian, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and his colleagues conducted a 2009 analysis that found that processed meats were tied to a 19% higher diabetes risk. Article originally titled “’Spam’ meat tied to diabetes risk in Native Americans, study finds” as reported by foxnews.com and Reuters on January 31, 2012.
- “Dietary fat and meat intake in relation to risk of type 2 diabetes in men” by van Dam RM, Willett WC, Rimm EB, Stampfer MJ, and Hu FB from the Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts USA, as published in Diabetes Care. 2002 Mar;25(3):417-24.
- Study by Dr Wei Bao, PhD, as published the study in Diabetes Care, February 1, 2013. After adjustment for weight, age, dietary factors, including fat and cholesterol intake, and other cofounders, for 15,294 women, greater consumption of animal protein was associated with significantly increased GDM risk, while higher vegetable protein intake was associated with significantly reduced risk. This study was funded by the Intramural Research Program of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health. The Nurses’ Health Study II was funded by research grants from the National Institutes of Health. As reported by Medscape on February 6, 2013.
- Study paper published in medical journal The Lancet, 2012. “In the last 20 years, diabetes has developed a lot, but it’s only now showing up in the medical system,” said Dr Tong Xiaolin, vice director of the Guanganmen Hospital in Beijing. There are now about 92 million diabetics in China but that is expected to rise to 130 million by 2030. “We were very surprised and couldn’t believe how fast it grew,” said Peking Union Medical College Hospital specialist Xiang Hongding. As reported by Reuters and thechicagotribune.com on March 254, 2012.
- Study by epidemiologist Jared Reis, PhD, and colleagues, analyzed data collected from more than 200,000 adults in the U.S. aged 50 to 71 over a period of 11 years, as conducted by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of Health. The research confirmed yet again that the combination of healthy lifestyle habits can reduce the risk of developing type II diabetes by about 80%. As reported on November 18 2011.
Meat & Cancer, Stroke & Cardiometabolic Disease References:
- World Cancer Research Fund International, ‘Continuous Update Project Report: Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Breast Cancer Survivors 2014.’ Study based on the findings of the CUP Breast Cancer Survivors Systematic Literature Review (SLR) and the CUP Expert Panel discussion in June 2013; total number of women in the 85 studies reviewed was 164,416; WHO. Breast Cancer: prevention and control, 2014.
- The 2010 Global Burden of Disease Study, The Lancet; 2010 Heart and Stroke Statistics Report, The American Heart Association and the WHO.
- Norat, T., Riboli, E., ‘Meat consumption and colorectal cancer: a review of epidemiologic evidence.’ Nutrition Reviews, 2001, 59(2):37–47.
- Esselstyn, C.B. and colleagues, ‘A way to reverse CAD?’ Cleveland Clinic. Journal of Family Practice 2014, 63(7):356–364.
- Dr Michael Miedema, ‘Eating fruits, vegetables linked to healthier arteries later in life.’ The American College of Cardiology and ScienceDaily, 28 March 2014.
- Study by researchers on data from 93,600 women aged 25–42 enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study II, Harvard School of Public Health and University of East Anglia, UK. Circulation, 2013.
- Pettersen, B.J., Anousheh, R. and Fan, J., et al., ‘Vegetarian diets and blood pressure among white subjects: results from the Adventist Health Study-2 (AHS-2).’ Public Health Nutrition, 2012, ;15(10):1909–1916. The Adventist Health Study is a cohort investigation that has been tracking since 1974. Researchers at the Center for Health Research, headquarters for the Adventist Health Study, and every scientist, researcher, doctor and professor has agreed that the lifestyle these people follow is amongst the healthiest in the world and it gives the Adventists strong protection against all the deadly diseases that are crippling the modern world while delivering ten times more centenarians than the US average.
- Tantamango-Bartley, Y., Jaceldo-Siegl, K., Fan, J., Fraser, G., ‘Vegetarian diets and the incidence of cancer in a low-risk population.’ Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Previews, 2013, 22:286–94.
- Key, T.J., Appleby, P.N., Crowe, F.L., Bradbury, K.E., Schmidt, J.A., Travis, R.C., ‘Cancer in British vegetarians: updated analyses of 4998 incident cancers in a cohort of 32,491 meat eaters, 8612 fish eaters, 18,298 vegetarians and 2246 vegans.’ American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 4 June 2014.
- Armstrong and R. Doll, ‘Environmental factors and cancer incidence and mortality in different countries, with special reference to dietary practices.’ International Journal of Cancer, 1975, 15:617–31.
- Cho, E., Chen, W.Y., Hunter, D.J., Stampfer, M.J., Colditz, G.A., Hankinson, S.E., et al., ‘Red meat intake and risk of breast cancer among premenopausal women.’ Archives of Internal Medicine, 2006, 166:2253–9.
- Swedish study by Bellavia, A., Larsson, S.C., Bottai, M., Wolk, A., Orsini, N., ‘Fruit and vegetable consumption and all-cause mortality: a dose-response analysis.’ American Journal of Clinical Nutrition online, 26 June 2013.
- Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1988–1994, analysed by Rathod, A.D., et al., ‘Healthy eating index and mortality in a nationally representative elderly cohort.’ Archives of Internal Medicine, 2012, 172(3): 275–277.
- Journal of Nutrition, Vol. 136, pp. 2606–2610.
- American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online, 18 May 2011.
- Public Health Nutrition, 2003, Vol. 6, pp. 453–461.
- Chernomorsky, S., et al., ‘Effect of Dietary Chlorophyll Derivatives on Mutagenesis and Tumour Cell Growth.’ Teratogenesis, Carcinogenesis, and Mutagenesis, 79:313–322, 1999.
- Vlad, M., et al., ‘Effect of Cuprofilin on Experimental Atherosclerosis.’ Romania, Institute of Public Health and Medical Research, University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoka, 1995.
- Study analysis from an international retrospective case-control study of acute nonfatal MI, the INTERHEART study, as well as FINRISK, of cardiovascular disease in Finland, by Do, R., et al., ‘The effect of chromosome 9p21 variants on cardiovascular disease may be modified by dietary intake: Evidence from a case/control and a prospective study.’ PLoS Medicine 2011, 9(10): e1001106.
- Hung H.C., Joshipura, K.J., Jiang, R., ‘Fruit and vegetable intake and risk of major chronic disease.’ Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2004, 96:1577–1584.
- N. Mitrou, V. Kipnis, A.C.M. Thiebaut, J. Reedy, A.F. Subar, E. Wirfalt, A. Flood, T. Mouw, A.R. Hollenbeck, M.F. Leitzmann, A. Schatzkin, ‘Mediterranean Dietary Pattern and Prediction of All-Cause Mortality in a US Population — Results From the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study.’ Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 167, No. 22, pp. 2461–2468.
- Rautiainen S. and fellow researchers, study on the Swedish Mammography Cohort, ‘Total antioxidant capacity of diet and risk of stroke: A population-based prospective cohort study.’ Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association, 2011.
- Study by Dr Frank B. Hu, of the departments of Nutrition and Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, on 833,234 people. BMJ, 2014, 349:g4490, 29 July 2014.
- Daniel Imhoff (ed.), From CAFO: The Tragedy of Industrial Animal Factories, Watershed Media and the Foundation for Deep Ecology. A book on Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO), 2010.
- Feng He, MBBS, PhD, et al., ‘Effect of longer-term modest salt reduction on blood pressure: Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials.’ Queen Mary University of London, British Medical Journal, 2013, DOI:10.1136/bmj.f1325.
Jason wishes to deeply thank, acknowledge and recognise the effort and contribution that the PIF Foundation has provided on a voluntary basis since 2014, as we educated, motivated and inspired change that helps transform the health, vitality and longevity of people all over the world.