| New Study Supports Major Change in Diet Treatment for Diabetes | |
by Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine - 7/27/2006
Vegan Diet Rivals Oral
Diabetes Medications
in Federally Funded Study;
Study Participants to
Describe Their Experiences
at Briefing with Researchers
with George Washington
University and University
of Toronto
WASHINGTON—A
low-fat vegan diet treats
type 2 diabetes more effectively
than a standard diabetes
diet and may be more effective
than single-agent therapy
with oral diabetes drugs,
according to a study in the
August issue of Diabetes
Care, a journal published
by the American Diabetes
Association. Study
participants on the low-fat
vegan diet showed dramatic
improvement in four disease
markers: blood sugar control,
cholesterol reduction, weight
control, and kidney function.
The randomized controlled
trial was conducted by doctors
and dieticians with the Physicians
Committee for Responsible
Medicine (PCRM), the George
Washington University, and
the University of Toronto
with funding from the National
Institutes of Health and
the Diabetes Action Research
and Education Foundation.
The vegan diet represents a major
departure from current diabetes
diets, in that it placed
no limits on calories, carbohydrates,
or portions. “The diet
appears remarkably effective,
and all the side effects
are good ones—especially
weight loss and lower cholesterol,” says
lead researcher Neal D. Barnard,
M.D., PCRM president and
adjunct associate professor
of medicine at the George
Washington University. “I
hope this study will rekindle
interest in using diet changes
first, rather than prescription
drugs.” Diabetes rates
have climbed rapidly in recent
years, and more than 20 million
Americans now have the disease,
which is linked to kidney
failure, blindness, and cardiovascular
disease.