According to the World Health Organization, approximately 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese. And while many people around...
According to the World Health Organization, approximately 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese. And while many people around...
According to the World Health Organization, approximately 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese. And while many people around the world struggle with their weight, for people with type 2 diabetes, weight control is critical to balanced blood sugar and insulin levels (and might even be the cause of the weight gain in the first place). This can create a vicious circle of weight gain, leading to poorer diabetes control, which leads to more weight gain.
Incorporating a healthy diet and exercise into your type 2 diabetes management plan is not only great for losing weight, but it’s also ideal for improving your health, balancing your blood sugar levels and reducing your insulin resistance. When you lose weight, particularly around your midsection, your risk for heart disease and other medical complications associated with diabetes decrease as well. These can include eye diseases, neuropathy (nerve damage, especially to your extremities) kidney failure, liver damage, high blood pressure, and stroke. So, why aren’t more people with diabetes shedding their extra pounds? Want to learn more about reversing your type 2 diabetes? Read this blog post.
Firstly, people with type 2 diabetes often have high levels of insulin, a fat-storing hormone. The higher your blood glucose levels are, the more insulin your body produces, in an attempt to better move the glucose out of your blood. But insulin also promotes fat storage, so diabetics are likely to gain weight, or struggle to lose it. This is also true of artificially administered insulin and insulin-promoting medications prescribed by doctors. Secondly, “diabetes diets” can have you eating small meals throughout the day to balance your sugar - and leave you feeling hungry. And when you’re really hungry, you might break and eat something carb-rich that causes a fast spike in sugar (cue the insulin), and unwanted weight gain.