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Reverse Your Diabetes in 12 Weeks

The Scientifically Proven Program to Avoid, Control, and Turn Around Your Diabetes

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A groundbreaking program to avoid, control, and even reverse diabetes through diet and exercise.
The research of Dr. George King, chief scientific officer of Harvard Medical School’s Joslin Diabetes Center, is widely recognized in the medical community as the gold standard. In Reverse Your Diabetes in 12 Weeks (previously published in hardcover as The Diabetes Reset), Dr. King transforms the center’s cutting-edge research—including the discovery of brown fat and how it enhances the effects of the body’s own insulin—into a program of eight proven strategies.
Foremost is diet—but the real surprise is that the diet that actually works, a modified “rural Asian diet,” derives 70% of its calories from carbohydrates. Dr. King disentangles the myths and confusion surrounding carbohydrates, fats, protein, and fiber, and shows why not all carbs are bad and why sugar is not the root of all evil. Losing weight is also key, but in a very doable way—significant changes happen with a 5 to 7% reduction of body weight. He emphasizes the importance of exercise—it increases the muscles’ glucose-absorbing ability—and gives an easy-to-follow program of aerobic and strength exercises. And he shows why diabetics especially need those seven hours of sleep a night—chronic lack of sleep causes insulin resistance.
A twelve-week plan shows how to put all of it into action—to take charge of blood glucose levels and significantly improve your health.
 

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2015

      Millions of Americans have Type 2 diabetes, or are in danger of developing it. In this title, King (Joslin Diabetes Ctr.) states that "No two cases of Type 2 diabetes (or prediabetes) are alike." With this in mind, the author offers a wide range of strategies for preventing the onset of the illness or managing one's health once a diagnosis is made. King provides a series of promises at the outset of the book that, depending on the patient's stage of development, include restoring glucose sensitivity to normal, avoiding the need for medication, and even "resetting" the need for medication at all. The language is careful to include qualifiers like "may allow you to reset" but the focus seems to be on how any healthy change is a good one. Part 1 supplies eight strategies for the "Diabetes Reset Toolbox," including the "Rural Asian Diet," burning calories, and reducing stress. Part 2 shares a week-by-week plan for implementing the strategies outlined in Part 1. VERDICT While the promise of a "reset" may set off some red flags for skeptics, readers searching for a hopeful look at life with Type 2 diabetes or a step-by-step guide to making lifestyle changes will be attracted to this book.--Mindy Rhiger, Minneapolis

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from December 1, 2014
      Normally, only a teaspoonful (four grams) of glucose circulates in the bloodstream of an average individual. Maintaining that little bit of glucose in a tight range is a big job for the body and essential to good health. When levels of glucose climb (as a result of insulin resistance followed by a drop in insulin production), type 2 diabetes develops. This excellent guide to managing prediabetes and type 2 diabetes emphasizes eight strategies to reset the body's capability to metabolize blood glucose: healthy nutrition; moderate aerobic exercise with a strength training program; maintenance of normal weight; activation of calorie-burning brown fat; prevention of chronic, low-grade inflammation; reduction of mental stress; sufficient sleep; and intake of natural antioxidants. The recommended diet is nontraditional: low-fat, high-fiber with a nutrient mix of 70 percent carbohydrates, 15 percent fat, and 15 percent protein. Modest reduction (5 to 7 percent) of body weight is touted as a quick way of increasing insulin sensitivity. Helpful aids are provided, including meal plans, a yearly medical checklist, tips for losing weight, important blood tests, and exercise routines. Controlling gestational diabetes is also covered. King (physician and longtime diabetes researcher at the Joslin Diabetes Center) and Flippin bestow a gift on diabetic patients: up-to-date, evidence-based medical information along with encouragement and empowerment, optimism and opportunity.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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