Low Carb Paleo Show 112 Hanna Boethius – Diabetes Expert Interview

 

In this Show…

Hosts: Alain Braux and Mark Moxom interview Hanna Boethius

Hanna Boethius is a coach, writer and speaker, who loves diabetes topics that are off of the beaten track. She’s passionate to find motivational and inspiring ways to bring about a change in diabetes management, with international public speaking engagements and smaller workshops as her main tools. Through her own company, Hanna Diabetes Expert, she’s coached numerous people with diabetes to a healthier life. She has a profound understanding of how things like nutrition and lifestyle choices can balance diabetes.

Here’s her story.

Show Notes

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The Show

About the Presenters

Mark Moxom

Mark is a multiple best selling author on food, health and business. He has had decades of experience in natural health and is an outspoken advocate of natural nutrition and drug free living. He’s also the founder and executive editor of Low Carb Mag.

Your hosts - Mark Moxom and Alain Braux

Alain Braux

Alain is a French Chef by training and a Culinary Nutritionist by passion. he is also and award-winning, Amazon best-seller food and health author. On top of that, he is a speaker on GMO (genetically modified organisms) issues. Find out more about Alain


Source: LCPS

DINING FOR THE DIABETIC: Watch out for those carbs!

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The Modern Western breakfast which typically consists of cereals, breads, toasts, pancakes, waffles and all amount of grain-based, carbohydrate-loaded foods is by many people labeled as healthy simply because  it is relatively fat free being served up with just a dash of low fat milk and margarine instead of butter. Therefore according to them – it must be good for you.

But you might have noticed over the last few decades that the popularity of these types of breakfast has reached the point where now it’s almost THE universal breakfast fair.

But really in many ways the increase in this type of food is just an indication of the huge increase in consumption of carbohydrates that we in the West have slowly been accepting as the norm. At the same time the incidences of diabetes and related conditions have also gone up. In fact if you put the graph of the consumption of carbohydrates next to the graph of the incidence of these types of diseases, there’s an uncanny relationship.

The curious thing about eating carbohydrates is that even though you might eat large quantities of them, very quickly afterwards you become hungry, and there’s actually a physical reason for that. The consumption of carbohydrates results in the release of insulin. This has the effect of removing nutrients from the bloodstream simply because the body is expecting more to arrive.

The net result is that instead of feeling satiated very soon after eating a carb-loaded meal, breakfast being a typical example, we feel like we’re hungry again and of course by being hungry so soon after just eating, the tendency is to eat more even though in reality the body doesn’t actually need more. So you can see a vicious circle occurring and the only result that can happen from that is a slow but sure increase in body weight.

From more of my years’ experience in helping people work out a natural way of eating for themselves, I’ve seen that the excessive consumption of carbohydrates by many people would, if they were any other substance, be called an addiction. The reason for that is that when we eat carbohydrates the body releases serotonin and serotonin is the chemical in our brain that improves our mood and has a relaxing effect. It has a tendency to decrease stress and anxiety and to a certain extent will also alleviate pain. But the level of serotonin in our diet is also determined by the other things that we eat and if those other things are forced out by an increase in consumption of carbohydrates then it follows that our levels of serotonin maybe less than usual. The body’s only recourse is to encourage us to start eating the things that give it the quickest fix of serotonin which turn out to be carbohydrates, just as a vain attempt to feel better and again you can see that this can only lead to one thing – increased weight gain.

So what’s going on here, how is the body doing this? Well, quite simply, after eating carbohydrates, our pancreas keeps in and starts producing insulin and that’s responsible for regulating the blood sugar levels to the process of breaking down carbohydrates into sugar. Typically, these would then enter the cells of the muscles and the liver and are used for energy by the body. But insulin also is used by the body to regulate our fat storage.

Now if we’ve had a meal high in carbohydrates, it’s obvious that the body is not going to immediately use the sugars that have been broken down through the action of the high levels of insulin that eating those huge amounts of carbohydrates have produced. Now what’s going to happen is the increased levels of insulin combined with the increased levels of sugar in our blood will mean that the body will store the excess as fat.

Putting in simpler terms, higher consumption of carbohydrates than the body needs promotes the release of higher levels of insulin which then promotes a higher level of fat storage and I’m sure you can see that the reverse is going to be true, lower levels of carbohydrate consumption will result in lower levels of insulin production which will result in minimal, if any, storage of fat.

Now the exact cause of diabetes is unknown but many studies attributes diabetes to excess weight and lack of activity and current research indicates that nearly 8% of the population in developing countries will be diabetic within probably less than 15 years. Now the thing is, people suffering from Type II Diabetes in particular have been shown to have, in general, high blood glucose levels due to insulin resistance. This is where insulin becomes less effective at lowering our blood sugar levels. So it follows then that if your body is less effective at lowering blood sugar levels, it makes sense not to raise them in the first place through eating carbohydrate-loaded meals.

So what should you then if you’re diabetic? Well, simply put, if the diet that you’re following now isn’t working for you, perhaps it may be a wise decision to change it to something that will work for you. Many diabetics have found that a low carb way of eating has not only brought their diabetes under control (meaning they no longer need tablets or shots), it has actually made it go away entirely. That really is food for thought.

Sweet poison: why sugar is ruining our health

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Being a child of the 60s I grew up with everything being sweetened, with tons and tons of sugar. And of course in later life that didn’t do me any good.

Thankfully in my late 20s I realized what this was doing to my body and decided that the two spoonful of sugar in my tea and the two or three in coffee had to stop simply because when you add up how much sugar I was having each day, it was probably somewhere around 40 teaspoonfuls and that of course doesn’t include what was in the food that I was eating.

According to this article by Victoria Lambert, the average person consumes around about 238 teaspoons of this potentially toxic substance each and every week. And she asks the question; just how hard is it to go sugar-free? Well thankfully, she also answers it as well.

So do follow the link below and find out how you can get sugar-free or at least drastically cut down something that is probably ruining your health.

Waistline Index Grows as Emerging Markets Eat Fast Food

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If anyone doubts the correlation between the increased consumption in fast food and the steadily growing waistlines in both men and women would do well to have a quick peek at this rather informative article from Bloomberg. It shows a direct correlation between the influx of fast food chains into many countries around the world in the late 80s and the average weight gain and waist size increase that has been measured in these countries today.

 Now while it may be unfair to lay the dietary ills of all these reason converts to fast food at the doors of the likes of McDonald’s and Pizza Hut and Dominoes and fill in the blank, it is certain that the changes in diet encouraged by the successful advertising of these companies has had an adverse effect on the eating habits of the countries that they have steadily been achieving a significant market share within.

Link to the article

Low-Carb Diet May Slow Alzheimer’s Disease

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You know it’s curious when many people ask me about what I think they should do about such and such a condition. They all seem surprised when I say “well, let’s have a look at what you’re eating before we go any further” because over the years I found truly that so many of the problems, diseases, illnesses both physical and mental far too often have a source or certainly a highly contributory factor in what we eat and having watched my mother suffer with Parkinson’s disease and many of her friends and those in that generation suffer with Alzheimer’s as well.

Nothing yet has convinced me that there’s not quite a bit of truth that the gradual lowering in quality of our food has contributed quite strongly to the gradual increase in many of the health problems that we as a society suffer which is why I’m quite happy to  recommend the article that I’m linking to below by Dr. Mercola who’s looking at the work of another doctor, Dr. Ron Rosedale, who’s a prominent  expert in low carb and high-quality fat approach to improving health and the article points to a very interesting conclusion that Alzheimer’s might well be considered as brain diabetes.

It’s well worth a good read as not only do they point out some of the more cutting edge work about exactly what casues Alzheimer’s but they lead on from that and tell us about how we can avoid Alzheimer’s just by simple changes in our diet and behavior to a certain extent anyway, fairly recommend as well and I hope it helps you.

Link to the article

Carbs are key

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The world needs more people like Peggy Newman. She’s a Family Nurse practitioner at Southeastern Medical Clinic in White Lake and she takes the time and trouble to teach people about exactly what carbohydrates are.

Her main audience is people who have diabetes but obviously that would also apply to people who are wanting to follow a low carbohydrate diet in order to deal with the diabetes and other health problems such as being overweight.

 It’s a matter of fact little story this but frankly it’s quite touching but someone would give up their time and take the trouble to help show other people how to live better and healthier lives.

Three cheers for Peggy! Maybe this story will touch your heart as well…. The link is below.

Link to the full article