10 Proven Eating Habits That Prevent Diabetes, According to New Science
Eat to beat diabetes with these new study-backed tips.
by Lauren Gelman and Kelsey Kloss
You brown-bag lunch and eat home-cooked dinners
Harvard School of Public Health researchers recently analyzed a few
decades' worth of data on about 100,000 participants from the Nurses'
Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study. Those who
consumed around two homemade lunches or dinners a day (11 to 14 meals a
week) had a 13 percent lower risk of developing diabetes than those who
ate fewer than six such meals weekly. Homemade meal eaters gained less
weight, which likely played a role in their lower diabetes risk.
You eat whole grains throughout the day
People who ate 10 grams of grain-based fiber (oatmeal for breakfast,
quinoa in your lunch salad) reduced their risk of diabetes by 25
percent, according to recent research in the journal Diabetologia.
One of your daily snacks is walnuts
When people at risk of developing diabetes ate about 2 ounces of walnuts
every day for three months, they experienced improvements in blood
vessel function and a decrease in LDL cholesterol levels, both risk
factors for type 2 diabetes. "Adding walnuts to your diet will improve
your diet quality and health -- cardiometabolic health specifically --
and you can add walnuts without fear of weight gain because they are
very satiating and appear to bump out other calories quite reliably and
make room for themselves," study author David L. Katz, MD, of the Yale
University Prevention Research Center told
Reuters. The study was funded by the California Walnut Commission.
Your diet includes these staples: tomatoes, potatoes, bananas
What do they have in common? They're all rich in potassium, a mineral
that a recent study linked with protecting the heart and kidney health
of people with diabetes. Higher levels of urinary potassium excretion,
which closely correlate with intake amounts, were linked with a slower
decline of kidney function and a lower incidence of cardiovascular
complications.
Your go-to foods don't vary much from day to day
Researchers from Tufts University and the University of Texas Health
Science Center recently discovered that people who have more diversity
in their diets -- perhaps counter-intuitively -- had worse metabolic
health, including larger waist circumferences, than people who tended to
eat a smaller range of foods every day. "Americans with the healthiest
diets actually eat a relatively small range of healthy foods," Dariush
Mozaffarian, MD, senior author and dean of the Friedman School of
Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University in Boston, said in a
press release. "These results suggest that in modern diets, eating
'everything in moderation' is actually worse than eating a smaller
number of healthy foods."
You heart yogurt
One additional serving of yogurt a day is linked with an 18 percent
lower risk of type 2 diabetes, according to a large Harvard study.
Researchers hypothesize that yogurt's probiotics may help improve
insulin sensitivity and reduce inflammation, but more clinical trials
are needed to determine this. Total dairy consumption was not associated
with diabetes risk, and the study didn't differentiate between yogurt
types.
You don't graze all day long
People with diabetes are often told to eat six small meals throughout
the day, but fewer, bigger meals may be better, according to a new
study. Czech researchers analyzed data from a previous study comparing
two diets in 54 people with type 2 diabetes. Participants ate six small
meals per day for 12 weeks, then a large high-fiber breakfast and lunch
(but no dinner) for 12 weeks. When they ate two meals a day,they
reported feeling less hungry, lost more weight, had lower blood sugar,
and noted stark improvements in mood.
If you eat bread at dinner, you save it for the end
People with type 2 diabetes had a 30 percent higher peak blood sugar
when they ate bread before a meal compared with when they ate it after a
meal, according to a small study published in Diabetes Care.
Related research has shown that a rapid increase in blood sugar causes
hormonal and metabolic changes that promote excessive eating in obese
individuals. Eating bread after a meal slows the conversion of refined
carbohydrates into sugar and may keep food consumption in check,
especially in people with weight problems, insulin resistance, or
diabetes.
You chew (and don't chug) your fruit
People who ate whole fruits -- particularly blueberries, apples, and
grapes -- at least twice a week cut their risk of developing type 2
diabetes by up to 23 percent compared with people who ate them no more
than once a month, according to a new study in BMJ. For fruit
juice, however, the reverse was true. People who sipped a serving or
more a day had up to a 21 percent increased risk of developing the
metabolic disorder.
Your fridge is free of sugary drinks
One or two servings a day has been linked to as high as a 26 percent
increased risk in developing diabetes. "Limiting intake is one simple
change that will have a measurable impact on weight control and
prevention of cardio-metabolic diseases," Harvard researchers and
authors of a recent Journal of the American College of Cardiology study concluded
No comments:
Post a Comment