Improving Just Your Diet Can Lower Risk for Type 2 Diabetes
Improving the overall quality of your diet helps to prevent type 2 diabetes, according to new research.
The study, by researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health, found that those who improved their diet over four years – by eating more whole grains, fruits and vegetables, and less sweetened beverages and saturated fats, for example – reduced their risk for type 2 diabetes by about 20 percent, compared to those who made no changes to their diets.
The study also examined whether improved diet was a marker of other lifestyle changes, such as weight loss or increased physical activity, or if it could independently reduce a person’s risk for developing type 2 diabetes. The research was presented at the American Diabetes Association’s 74th Scientific Sessions®.
“We found that diet was indeed associated with diabetes independent of weight loss and increased physical activity,” said lead researcher Sylvia Ley, PhD, a post-doctoral fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health.
“If you improve other lifestyle factors you reduce your risk for type 2 diabetes even more, but improving diet quality alone has significant benefits,” she said. “This is important because it is often difficult for people to maintain a calorie-restricted diet for a long time. We want them to know if they can improve the overall quality of what they eat – consume less red meat and sugar-sweetened beverages, and more fruits, vegetables and whole grains – they are going to improve their health and reduce their risk for diabetes.”
The study also found that it didn’t matter how nutritious or poor a person’s diet was when they started out, she said. “Regardless of where participants started, improving diet quality was beneficial for all.”
Source: American Diabetes Association news release
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