The American College of Physicians has issued less strict guidelines for the treatment of Type 2 diabetes, but some doctors and groups like the American Diabetes Association stand by accepted practices:
Major Medical Associations Feud Over Diabetes Guidelines
A major medical association today suggested that doctors who treat people with Type 2 diabetes can set less aggressive blood sugar targets. But medical groups that specialize in diabetes sharply disagree.
Half a dozen medical groups have looked carefully at the best treatment guidelines for the 29 million Americans who have Type 2 diabetes and have come up with somewhat differing guidelines.
The American College of Physicians has reviewed those guidelines to provide its own recommendations [open, DOI: 10.7326/M17-0939] [DX], published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. It has decided that less stringent goals are appropriate for the key blood sugar test, called the A1C.
Also at Reuters.
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Thursday March 08 2018, @12:58AM
Yeah, I've seen dieticians. (Note the plural.) I did that before I tried the (sort of) Atkins diet. She said "Well, it's not too bad if you don't stay on it too long.", and gave some advice about details. But for me it sent my triglycerides through the roof (as I said). Even now if I eat much meat my blood sugar rises like crazy. Fish, cheese (low carb cheese!), and eggs don't seem to have that affect.
Please note, I'm not saying this would work for everyone. I'm saying I tried different things and measured the results, and for me this is what worked best of the things I've tried so far. Just recently I've started trying low carb tofu hot dogs. So far they seem to be reasonably acceptable. But note the low carb...that's not true of all tofu hot dogs. The beef and chicken dogs send my glucose skywards....but this doesn't mean it would work that way for you. Test and measure.
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