2. Doctor Llyod Mccann, ( South African ) Tamaki Health CEO, he should therefore push the healthy ketogenic diet in1 abovewhich is more meat and very few carbohydrates * sugara and grains ie Sugars. They are also called simple carbohydrates because they are in the most basic form. They can be added to foods, such as the sugar in candy, desserts, processed foods, and regular soda. They also include the kinds of sugar that are found naturally in fruits, vegetables, and milk. Starches. They are complex carbohydrates, which are made of lots of simple sugars strung together. Your body needs to break starches down into sugars to use them for energy. Starches include bread, cereal, and pasta. They also include certain vegetables, like potatoes, peas, and corn. And sugar drinks. Heythe very few good doctors, like Dr Ken D Berry say stick to mor meat fish eggs says
Do we need a new HONEST American Diabetes Association??? The American Diabetes Association (ADA) seems far more interested in protecting the profits of their million-dollar donors than in protecting people with diabetes from severe complications. Low-Carb/Keto diets are the most researched dietary intervention for diabetes and yet the ADA can't seem to publicly recommend this way of eating. The ADA recommending High-carb foods (big-food profits) increases a persons need for expensive medications (big-pharma profits) and medical procedures (big-medicine profits). Who doesn't profit from the ADA's current recommendations? PEOPLE WITH DIABETES, THAT'S WHO! The ADA was started back in 19XX by 6 doctors who got together and said, "We should start a diabetes association", and now the ADA has a 100 million dollar annual budget. We can work together to create a diabetes association that puts people with diabetes first, not last!Do we need a new American Diabetes Association??? The American Diabetes Association (ADA) seems far more interested in protecting the profits of their million-dollar donors than in protecting people with diabetes from severe complications. Low-Carb/Keto diets are the most researched dietary intervention for diabetes and yet the ADA can't seem to publicly recommend this way of eating. The ADA recommending High-carb foods (big-food profits) increases a persons need for expensive medications (big-pharma profits) and medical procedures (big-medicine profits). Who doesn't profit from the ADA's current recommendations? PEOPLE WITH DIABETES, THAT'S WHO! The ADA was started back in 19XX by 6 doctors who got together and said, "We should start a diabetes association", and now the ADA has a 100 million dollar annual budget. We can work together to create a diabetes association that puts people with diabetes first, not last!
GOTO THE NEXT VIDEOS BELOW TO BEAT THEM ALL FOR GOOD HEALTH
he enemy IE BIG FOOD AND BIG PHARMA AND MOST DOCTORS AND ALL OF BIG MEDIA, ALLOWED THE FIRST EVIL MURDERING FOOD PYRAMID TO CHANGE US FROM A PROPER ANCESTRAL DIET OF MOSTLY MEAT, EGGS, BUTTER, FISH,
I learned this the hard way. When I found out I was diabetic I begged my Dr’s to tell me what to eat. They kept adding more medication. They sent me to a diabetic class that was sponsored by the ADA. I kept calling out the teacher. I went to keto threw away my medications and fired my Dr’s.
"There is no cure for diabetes but it can be managed". Grrrrr. This makes me so angry. My Dad had horrible T2D complete with the purple toes, oozing legs sores and hugely puffy legs with massively painful neuropathy. He said it felt like walking on broken glass. When it got so bad that I had to take him to the hospital, he turned to me and said, "Well, I think I'm about ready to try that crazy diet of yours." I started cooking for him and cleaned out his kitchen. Within a week, his legs were all back to normal. Within a month, his blood tests showed no diabetes whatsoever.
Thank you Dr. Berry, My husband watched a video of yours on high blood pressure in December of 2019 and that one video lead to him trying Keto. He is carnivore now and has went from 250 to 162lbs!! Your videos have most definitely prolonged his life. P.S. He's a OTR truck driver. So to all the drivers out there, it can be done!
60 days of following your advice decreased my A1c from 6.8 to 5.5. Following the ADA advice instead would likely have resulted in chronic diabetes and made me a lifelong dependent on the medical and pharmaceutical industries. Thanks for standing up to them, Dr. Berry.
I’m so thankful that I have a doctor who says quit carbs and sugar ️
️
I found you videos about a month ago and decided to try the keto/carnivore diet and intermittent fasting, my sugars used to run between 500 - 600 without medication, on medication and insulin I still could not get under 250 - 300, since I started keto/carnivore & intermittent fasting my sugars have stayed between 120 - 140 and I am not taking any medication or insulin. Thank you Dr. Berry
I had to take a diabetes nutrition class after I had foot surgery, and the dietitian told me I needed to eat 250 grams of carbs per day in part because of the ADA. I had been eating around 50 g per day and my blood sugars were around 140-150, and I told them that increasing my carb intake was obviously ridiculous. But they insisted I would be "starving myself" if I didn't eat at least 120 carbs per day. To try to prove them wrong, I followed their advice and ate the ordered 250 grams of carbs per day. My blood sugar instantly shot up to 247. I then went to ZERO carbs and went full carnivore for 48 hours. My blood sugar was 108. I did not change medication at all just to control for it, and I was actually somewhat scared that my blood sugars might drop too low by the end because of that. So I told them my results, and they said, "Well you had foot surgery so your blood sugars are going to be higher." And I was like, "But you're the one who told me I won't heal fast until my blood sugars are under 140, and that I will actively be damaging myself if I'm over 200." Didn't matter. They want me to eat carbs because "reasons."
worked at a call center for a few months. We called high risk patients to do health checks. What these people were being told to eat was ridiculous! I had just started looking into low carb and i knew more than these poor people who had lost limbs to diabetes!
I recently stumbled onto the paperwork and assignments that the medical staff at the hospital gave to me (and quizzed me on before they would release me). ADA diet...as Dr. Berry said, full of carbs! 3 meals a day, 15-45 carbs per meal, and 3 snacks a day, 15 carbs each = up to 180 carbs a day! They also wanted my a1c dropped to 7.0. Yes, it was too high...but with their diet instructions, I would have remained a diabetic. I started low carb the day I walked out of the hospital...and adopted keto right away. I am off all diabetes and high blood pressure medications, with an a1c in the excellent to normal range. My husband said (about the ADA and hospital's advice), "They wanted to keep you sick." Keep on spreading the word!!! That is my goal...advocacy to help the health of others.
They'll
burn your house down talking like this , you've put a lot of work into
that house . Hope your property is all wired up with cameras and
floodlights . Stay safe , we need truth DR KEN D BERRY.
ADA is not a diabetics friend. Thank you Dr. Berry for setting the record straight. I read their book it made me angry and sad that my Dr. would give me this bad information. I hope other diabetic will get educated by listening to your advice.
I’m so mad at the ADA. My late husband was diagnosed with diabetes about 25 years ago. We followed the advice and he ended up with kidney failure, 2 heart attacks, numerous strokes, and died at 47. Found keto a few months before he died. This should not have happened
I've been to 3 endocrinologists over the 25 years since I was diagnosed as T2. They all gave me this similar advice. They all told me to eat at least 50 carbs for breakfast, 85 for lunch and 65 for dinner with 2 snacks in between meals. I've been doing keto for 2 months and lost 20 pounds. My goal is to stop medication. My a1c went from 6.8 to 6.2 after doing keto for just 3 weeks. I can't wait to see what it will be in July.
One day, Doctors will be sued for malpractice for following this garbage. Keep up the good work Doctor Ken D Berry.
I’m so very glad you made this video. I was Type 2 diabetic, and totally reversed this when I went on Keto in a little less than three months! I went from an A1C of 7.0 to 5.2. I’ve held this A1C for over three years. I’m well aware of the ADA, my mother swore by them, and was actually a local ADA board member. She could never get her diabetes under control long-term. I honestly have no use for them. Yes, you will get TONS of requests for donations from them now, and lots and lots of pharma spam. Sorry about that...but because of this video, if it reaches and helps people understand the truth, it will be worth it.
So we all trot off to the supermarket where the FOOD supermarket name has a new nane up beside ie PHARMACY!
NEW REPORT: Cost of type 2 diabetes trajectory is staggering but fixable
A new report launched tonight in Parliament shows that Aotearoa New Zealand has reached epidemic proportions of type 2 diabetes and is on a steep trajectory for the next 20 years. However, the report shows that this steep curve could be flattened or even squashed with the right interventions.
Key findings:
Number of New Zealanders with type 2 diabetes expected to increase by 70-90% in 20 years
Estimated annual cost of diabetes in NZ $2.1 billion (0.67% GDP), projected to increase by 63% to $3.5 billion in 20 years
Shift towards younger people developing type 2 diabetes expected to increase personal and economic impact of type 2 diabetes significantly
Inequities and health outcomes will worsen for Pacific, Asian and Māori populations if no action taken now
Holistic and system-wide response from Government, society and individuals needed urgently to change projected type 2 diabetes prevalence, costs and health outcomes
Four interventions could save hundreds of millions of dollars each, increase life expectancy and improve quality of life for a huge number of New Zealanders.
The Economic and Social Cost Of Type 2 Diabetes report, launched in Parliament by Associate Minister of Health Hon Peeni Henare on 15 March, was commissioned by Diabetes New Zealand, the University of Otago’s Edgar Diabetes and Obesity Research Centre (EDOR), Healthier Lives - He Oranga Hauora National Science Challenge, and undertaken by PwC New Zealand. The report was funded in part by a generous donation from Tony and Heather Falkenstein.
“The new report shows that urgent action is needed now to curb the growing costs of diabetes to the New Zealand economy as well as the costs to individuals and their whānau, both in terms of financial impact and livelihood,” says Heather Verry, CEO of Diabetes NZ.
“By changing from an ambulance at the bottom of the cliff approach to a fence at the top, we could be avoiding more than 600 amputations a year in people with type 2 diabetes.”
The sponsors of the study are calling on the NZ Government to take urgent action now to slow the current and predicted trajectory of type 2 diabetes in New Zealand.
“The current approach is not working if we want to stem this growing epidemic. Type 2 diabetes is not tracked as a national health target for a start, and yet the figures are growing at an alarming rate. New Zealand needs a holistic and system-wide response from Government, society and individuals to change the trajectory,” says EDOR Director Professor Rachael Taylor.
The report provides a strong case for reorienting policy and prioritising resources to address type 2 diabetes towards more equitable and effective interventions.
“All eyes remain on COVID-19 as a major current global health issue, but NZ is facing a staggering increase in numbers of people with type 2 diabetes and astronomical costs associated with this disease,” says Professor Taylor.
Professor Jim Mann, Director of the Healthier Lives National Science Challenge says:
“We’ve known for a long time that type 2 diabetes is an important and worrying issue in our communities, but we now know that its impact on New Zealand can be measured as a fraction of GDP with the $2.1b annual equivalent to 0.67% of GDP.”
That’s just for this one disease and is in purely financial terms, let alone the human cost to individuals and their families/whānau. The study found that the interventions led to outcomes which have cost benefits as well as improved wellbeing for those with diabetes and their family/whānau,” says Professor Mann.
“Although many are aware of type 2 diabetes issues, this report revealed a surprising extent of the issue and we were also surprised by how successful and cost-effective some of the interventions were.”
“Prevention is key to tackling this disease and we need effective public health prevention measures in place. This report mostly focuses on interventions for those who already have type 2 diabetes or prediabetes,” says Tamati Shepherd-Wipiiti (PwC), one of the report authors.
“Pacific, Asian and Māori peoples are disproportionately affected by this disease and part of the reason for undertaking this report was to address these health inequities in New Zealand.”
The current and projected prevalence of type 2 diabetes is highest for Pacific peoples, with a quarter of all New Zealand’s Pacific peoples projected to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in 20 years’ time. A similar concerning trend for Asian and Māori people demonstrates that if no further action is taken to address New Zealand’s type 2 diabetes problem, inequities and health outcomes will worsen for these populations.
Four interventions to curb the cost
Despite the dramatically increasing numbers of people with type 2 diabetes in Aotearoa, the report reveals some good news about resolving this alarming issue. The team investigated several viable and promising solutions that could flatten this trajectory, and greatly reduce both human and economic costs.
The research team analysed the figures and chose four interventions for type 2 diabetes. Each one addresses a different part of the type 2 diabetes pathway from preventing prediabetes progressing to type 2 diabetes, right through to better treatment for people who already have type 2 diabetes.
The report shows significant cost savings could be gained from all four interventions, based on cost-benefit analyses:
The Healthy People, Healthy Lives intervention – community-centred lifestyle programme for preventing prediabetes progressing to type 2 diabetes;
Owning our Futures – reversal of type 2 diabetes;
Better Diabetes Medications intervention – better management of type 2 diabetes;
Foot Screening and Protection – prevention of serious foot-related complications, such as amputation, for people with type 2 diabetes.
It also reveals how Government investment in the prevention, treatment and care of type 2 diabetes could have a significantly positive impact on New Zealand’s economy and society. The benefits vary with each intervention but are driven primarily by reducing health costs and increasing economic value through increasing life expectancy and productivity.
“As well as economic benefits, significant societal benefit can be achieved by improving peoples’ quality of life and ability to participate in society,” says Heather Verry.
-ENDS-
About The Edgar Diabetes and Obesity Research Centre (EDOR)
The Edgar Diabetes and Obesity Research Centre (EDOR) is housed at the University of Otago. EDOR aims to reduce the prevalence, and to improve the management, of diabetes and obesity by finding new ways to prevent and treat these conditions. Our mission is to make a significant contribution to reducing the global burden of diabetes and obesity through groundbreaking research, developing national and international guidelines in the areas of diabetes, obesity and nutrition, and disseminating this knowledge to health professionals, scientists, policymakers, and our communities. otago.ac.nz/diabetes
About Healthier Lives
Healthier Lives – He Oranga Hauora is one of 11 National Science Challenges, funded by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. We are a national collaborative research programme investigating innovative approaches to the prevention and treatment of four major non-communicable diseases – cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity. Healthier Lives is hosted by the University of Otago. Our vision: Aotearoa New Zealand with equitable health outcomes and a substantially reduced burden of non-communicable diseases. healthierlives.co.nz
About Diabetes New Zealand
Diabetes New Zealand is a charity that represents and supports people with diabetes. They have been around for over 50 years and have a national office in Wellington, and branches across the country with staff and volunteers who help people live well with diabetes.
About PwC New Zealand
PwC New Zealand employs over 1,600 people and has offices in the Auckland, Waikato, Hawkes Bay, Wellington, Canterbury and Otago regions. Our people are dedicated to solving the complex problems businesses are facing in today's changing market place.
PwC firms help organisations and individuals create the value they’re looking for. We’re a network of firms in 155 countries with more than 284,000 people who are committed to delivering quality in assurance, tax and advisory services. Find out more at www.pwc.co.nz
PwC refers to the New Zealand member firm, and may sometimes refer to the PwC network. Each member firm is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further details.
© 2020 PricewaterhouseCoopers. All rights reserved.
Comments
Post a Comment