New Game Plan Targets Pre-Diabetics
Nearly 57 Million Americans Are Dangerously Close to Developing Diabetes
-
Play CBS Video Video Eye On Pre-Diabetes Doctors are now taking more aggressive measures in order to help the 57 million Americans at risk of developing diabetes. As Dr. Jon LaPook reports, a healthy diet and exercise are essential.
-
Doctors think diet and exercise will help the nearly 57 million Americans at risk for diabetes. (CBS)
-
Special Report Diabetes Symptoms, treatments, and how to prevent it.
-
Video Archive Eye On Health CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook examines various health issues and treatments.
But for the first time, doctors have a game plan for how to help the 57 million Americans who are dangerously close to developing the disease, reports CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon Lapook.
New guidelines emphasize diet, exercise and weight-loss medication.
"There is a whole group of patients that are in a so-called gray area of pre-diabetes where they're not perfectly normal, but they also are not frankly diabetic and those are the patients who we really need to focus on," said Dr. Jacqueline Salas Spiegel of New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.
That pre-diabetes gray zone includes patients with a fasting blood sugar level of 100 to 125. Fasting blood sugar below 100 is considered normal; over 125 is diabetic.
About one-third of pre-diabetics will develop full-blown type 2 diabetes. And that's not the only danger.
"It can increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. That means heart attacks, strokes, as well as … circulatory problems," said Spiegel.
It may be really hard to get people to focus on something that hasn't happened to them yet. But diet and exercise really do work, reducing the progression of pre-diabetes to diabetes by 60 percent.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





It costs about the same to purchase a walking treadmill or stationary bicycle as compared to a doctor%u2019s visit.
Many times, family members are left in the dark to what to do about a love one%u2019s newly diagnosed disease.
Perhaps DVDs could be handed out to patients and their family members in order to educate them on such items as what to buy at the grocery store. The DVDs could also show patients how to begin exercising on the fitness equipment.
Coupons could be awarded for those who watch the DVDs for such items as the exercise equipment and healthy cookbooks.
If the patient does lose the weight, patients could be awarded the full purchase price of the exercise equipment and for some doctor%u2019s visits.
The money spent on such items would be more than made up by the savings of preventing complications to type-2 diabetes.
Well, I know "pre-diabetics" (after they lowered the standard) who are already skinny and get plenty of exercise since they work construction, so the assumption that everyone is overweight or lazy is just wrong.
It''s far more like the problem is caused by diet, in particular processed food including things like corn syrup. None of us really know what''s in that stuff. So I''d say this game plan completely misses the mark.
Such ingredients, he says, are not only unhealthy, but contribute to a national epidemic of obesity, heart disease, metabolic syndrome, etc.
Dr. Gupta says corn sweetener is bad enough when used to fatten feed lot cattle (whose systems begin to break down under the unnatural regime, and need antibiotics simply to make it to market). A "prime beef" burger, for example, is mostly fat by design.
But to force-feed the American nation on corn sweetener fattens not only the wallets of grain producers like Archer Daniel Midlands (ADM), but fattens all Americans, disposing them to disease onset patterns unheard of in preceding generations.
One day, I quietly complimented her on the new outfit she was wearing, and without being too obvious about it, mentioned she looked slimmer, somehow.
She was pleased to hear my comment, but I was astounded when she said there was no magic diet pill behind the real loss I had observed-- and she knew why she had lost.
Her secret was to stop eating fast food, and prepack her lunches with things that are good for her and stick to a Mediterranean-class diet.
Plus, she has a new emphasis on exercise and a determination to limit intake. When she feels empty, she says she eats fruits and veggies to restore the full feeling.
BTW, the woman is a recently-confirmed type 2 diabetic, and she confessed she knew she had to make a radical change in her ways. It appears she is on her way back to health.
I was close to death from type 2 diabetes in Feb 2005 and now I am a type 2 diabetic who is very well controlled controlled with diet and no meds. It took a lot of searching on my part to find good answers.
I share for free what I learned to help myself in hopes of helping others. I maintain the website Diabetic-Diet-Secrets.com. What can keep me well controlled is really just an optimized healthy diet that is good for anyone.
- by ubrew12 July 24, 2008 12:54 AM EDT
- To ''free-market capitalism'', a Big Mac and fries constitutes FOOD. Until we do something about ''lowest-common-denominator'' capitalism, nothing will change.
- Reply to this comment
See all 12 Comments