Stop Diabetes In Its Tracks

Over 80 million people in India are on the edge of developing diabetes. Only permanent lifestyle changes can make the difference. Which road will you take?

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Over 80 million people in India are on the edge of developing diabetes. Only permanent lifestyle changes can make the difference. Which road will you take?

"Your blood sugar is too high. You have prediabetes." When Gail Tudor heard her doctor say that in July 2015, the 55-year-old UK wedding videographer was shocked. How could she? She had a normal body mass index of 24 and she followed the recommended diet -- low in fat and high in fruits, vegetables and healthy grains. Plus Gail, a mother of two who lives in Wales, was very active -- skating, walking, kayaking and more. Since she already did those things, her doctor said, it was unlikely she could reverse her path to type 2 diabetes. She was offered a treatment plan including drugs, and was told that it was likely she'd need them for the rest of her life. "I couldn't believe it," Gail says. She was determined to learn what else she could do to prevent diabetes from developing -- without resorting to drugs.

When Anuradha Katyal*, 52, joined the Diabetes Community Lifestyle Improvement Program, or D-CLIP, a trial by Madras Diabetes Research Foundation to determine sustainable lifestyle intervention for the prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus in India, she was 77 kilos. This mother of an 18-year-old had a waist circumference of 91 cm and an HbA1c of 6.1 per cent. Doctors told the Chennai-based school administrator that she needed to make a change sooner than later.

In August 2015, at age 57, I, too, was told by my doctor that my fasting blood sugar was in the prediabetes range. I wasn't overweight. I exercised three times a week and walked 10, 000 steps every day. Moreover, as a health writer for more than 25 years, I had been following all the recommended dietary guidelines for three decades. What more could I do?

I began searching the medical literature for the most up-to-date facts and views. Prediabetes, I learnt, is a warning flag of health troubles down the road for millions of men and women who will be told that they have it. The World Health Organization states that globally, the number of people with diabetes has skyrocketed from 1...

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