January 17, 2012 10:30 AM

Paula Deen's type 2 diabetes: Is her cooking to blame?

By
Ryan Jaslow
Topics
News ,
Diabetes ,
Celebrity

Paula Deen promotes the book "Paula's Southern Cooking Bible" on Oct. 12, 2011, in Ridgewood, N.J.

(Credit: Getty)

(CBS) Paula Deen announced today that she has type 2 diabetes. The 64-year-old Food Network star said she's teamed up with drug maker Novo Nordisk to promote a new program called "Diabetes in a New Light" which offers recipe tips and other coping advice for people with the disease.

Deen has had the disease for three years and treats it with the Novo Nordisk drug Victoza, according to USA Today. Victoza is a once daily injectable drug used with diet and exercise to control blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes.

Rumors had circulated last week that Deen was going to partner with drug maker Novartis on its new type 2 diabetes drug, but Novartis had denied the claim to CBS News.

Deen said her diagnosis is not a death sentence and won't change how she cooks, but diabetes has caused her to make some lifestyle changes.

"I have made simple changes in my life, like cutting back on one of my favorite things, sweet tea - and for a Southern girl, that's a big deal," she said in a video on the Diabetes in a New Light website.

Her diagnosis has turned the spotlight toward the cooking she's famous for, which often contains rich, fatty foods loaded with butter and sugar.

"When your signature dish is a hamburger in between a doughnut, and you've been cheerfully selling this stuff knowing all along that you've got Type 2 Diabetes ... It's in bad taste if nothing else," celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, told People.

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Paula Deen confirms she has Type 2 diabetes

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Deen however defended her cooking style on the Today Show this morning, telling Al Roker, "Like I told Oprah, 'Honey, I'm your cook, not your doctor," she said. "You have to be responsible."

When it comes to her famous Southern recipes, Deen said she wouldn't change her ways entirely, but preached moderation.

"People see me cooking all these wonderful, Southern, fattening recipes... it's for entertainment," Deen said. "People have to be responsible."

What do diabetes experts have to say?

"To my knowledge no particular food has been linked to an increase in the risk of diabetes," Dr. Linda Siminerio, director of the diabetes institute at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, told MSNBC. "It's being overweight and inactive."

Deen told USA Today that diabetes is like "Russian roulette," and can strike anyone. She said other factors contribute to diabetes, including genetics, race, age, and lifestyle.

Dr. Lauren Wissner Greene, clinical associate professor of medicine, at NYU School of Medicine, in New York, who was not involved in Deen's care, told HealthPop that Deen's announcement strikes her more as an "infomercial" for the Novo Nordisk drug, and takes issue with the idea that Deen can cook the same way if she makes simple lifestyle changes.

"She shouldn't lose her charm, but she needs to lose her weight," Greene told HealthPop. Greene said controlling intake of simple carbohydrates, cutting sugar and high fructose corn syrup, and eating more fruits and vegetables could help ward off diabetes, despite other risk factors that may predispose a person to the disease.

"It could strike anybody, but it's much less likely to strike someone active and skinny," Greene said. "We can probably be predisposed to diabetes, but we push it over the edge by eating too many carbohydrates and calories."

According to a recent study from the Annals of Internal Medicine, becoming overweight or obese, smoking, avoiding exercise, eating whatever you want, and drinking heavily are five ways to boost your risk for type 2 diabetes.

More than 25.8 million Americans have diabetes, 7 million of which probably don't know it yet. Type 2 is the most common form of the disease, which is caused when the body can't use insulin to break down sugar in the bloodstream for energy. Having type 2 diabetes could eventually lead to complications including heart attack, stroke, nerve damage, kidney damage, blindness or limb amputation.

The American Diabetes Association has more on type 2 diabetes.

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Diabetes: 10 Deadliest Myths

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Add a Comment See all 139 Comments
by Eric_Starson January 20, 2012 8:58 AM EST
I'm sad for Paula, but not all that surprised. Maybe she should look into a healthier diet to treat her diabetes instead of drugs? There's lots of interesting information available at this noncommercial, science based site (nutritionfacts.org). To quote the good doctor: "It is too bad Paula Deen missed this opportunity" to tell her fans "that type 2 diabetes can be prevented, managed, treated, and even cured". Read more at http://nutritionfacts.org/blog/2012/01/18/paula-deen-diabetes-drug-spokesperson/
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by Nate650 January 19, 2012 1:40 PM EST
For those who are blaming dietary fat, can you explain how the Maasai people of East Africa drink up to a gallon of whole raw milk per day, eat plenty of meat and drink cow blood and are one of the healthiest people in the world?

In one study I read about, when the Maasai were switched to a more Western diet, they began acquiring many of the same illnesses that Americans are plagued with. If that isn't persuasive enough, I don't know what is.
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by mswolfestock January 19, 2012 10:05 AM EST
I wouldn't have served her cooking to my worst enemy. It's plenty deadly but it works way too slow to be my weapon of choice.

She needs to get a clue and then she needs to watch reruns of Graham Kerr's excellent show "Take Kerr." She needs to do the same kind of about-face that Kerr did when he gave up being the Galloping Gourmet - he was using way too much clarified butter in everything. (And he was getting into the cooking wine way too much as well, but he was always entertaining.)
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by lartrainer January 19, 2012 9:23 AM EST
You are not my cook and never will be. While it is true that people can eat whatever they choose, and no one MADE them eat this stuff,we all have to be responsible for our own poor decisions. I do find it disturbing that she hid this condition for a lengthy amount of time while continuing (obviously) to eat the same unhealthy way. The reason I say obviously is because she knew it 3 years ago and still has not made the lifestyle changes to REALLY help keep her condtion under control. In 3 years she doesn't look like she has lost weight or started to eat healthy. Relying on a drug to "control" your diabetes is denial...you take the drug, but you still have diabetes. You have to have a lifestyle change. If someone told me I had diabetes, I WOULD consider it a threat to my life and health, and do something right away. In some (not all) cases it is controlled by proper diet and exercise. Don't you think cancer patients if told their cancer would go away with diet and exercise they would do it right away??
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by mswolfestock January 19, 2012 10:07 AM EST
Exactly! Diabetes is mostly preventable but incurable.
by cknix January 19, 2012 8:42 AM EST
I feel people need to leave Puala alone. Everyone has secerts! And she never made you eat her food, but lets get real we all eat butter. And Mr. bourdaln is one rude,mean man. Have you seen his shows, ofen he is rude to those people.
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by sirgknight January 19, 2012 8:30 AM EST
Paulas cooking may or may not have had anything to do with her diabetes, bless her little heart. Many of us eat foods that we know are not good for us. If you want to jump on a food source then start jumping on the fast food industry for hamburgers, hotdogs, french fries, onion rings and many other fat-filled foods. They have been in our lives a helluva lot longer than Paula Dean. If the food is responsible, then how many cases of diabetes has been caused by all of the fast food chains. I'll tell you this: as a native born American I have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and if eating fried chicken and blueberry pie makes me happy, then that is what I'm going to eat. We all must die of something and I can think of a lot worse ways to go.....
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by mswolfestock January 19, 2012 10:09 AM EST
The point is this: If you eat what Paula Deen cooks it will kill you, and diabetes is both preventable and incurable.
by misiewicz5 January 19, 2012 8:28 AM EST
it is not a big deal that she has diabetes. she says eat it in moderations and you can moderate the recipes too. she never tells everyone to choose the fattiest ingredients to use in the recipes so for people to get mad at her is wrong. it is not her fault that some people dont understand what she says or doesnt listen to the whole thing.
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by Carol7013 January 19, 2012 7:30 AM EST
Is she stuffing your mouth with her fatty foods? Just because she makes them, doesn't mean you have to eat them. Once in a while maybe one of her "butter and sugar" desserts might be nice but once or twice a year - anyone stupid enough to eat them all the time deserves what they get. By the way, there are a lot of factors that play into diabetes, not just fatty foods.
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by mswolfestock January 19, 2012 10:10 AM EST
Being in denial seems to be the biggest contributor to obesity and diabetes.
by nancy_naive January 19, 2012 6:15 AM EST
Anthony Bourdain was BANG smack on.

This woman was in the leg-breaking business and now sells crutches.
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by newsworthy8 January 18, 2012 9:50 PM EST
U is a dummy????, U suck people in, U no good...
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