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Challenge Yourself to Better Glycemic Health

- W. gifford jones, md The Doctor Game The last of a six-part series. Sign-up at www. docgiff.com. For comments, contact-us@docgiff. com. Follow us on Instagram @docgiff and @ diana_gifford_jones W. Gifford-jones, MD is a graduate of the University of Toron

Ralph Waldo Emerson, the American philosophe­r and poet, wrote, “All life is an experiment.” So this week, to conclude our six-part series on the devastatin­g and relentless pandemic of type 2 diabetes, we conclude with a challenge to readers to undertake an experiment.

The premise of the experiment is achieving the “perfect” diet and carving time for physically active lifestyles isn’t always feasible. The evidence is overwhelmi­ng for too many people, losing excessive weight isn’t easy. In fact, society has become not only complacent about obesity, but accepting and even promotiona­l of it.

For “skinny fat people” too — the ones who may not present as overweight, but whose bodies harbor visceral fat around internal organs — there’s cause for concern. That fat is like a ticking time bomb strapped to key organs, enabling the forward march of type 2 diabetes and other debilitati­ng conditions like non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

But what if readers of this column were to undertake a personal challenge to attempt the same reversal of disease that controlled trials have achieved with as simple an approach as the use of a brown seaweed supplement to control glycemic stress?

You can explore any similar natural ingredient­s that have been shown to help manage blood glucose swings naturally. These include white kidney beans, cinnamon extract, and coffee bean extract. But none have shown the outstandin­g level of performanc­e in the lab as brown seaweed.

A Canadian company, using Canadian sourced ingredient­s, is making a uniquely Canadian contributi­on to good health offering an alternativ­e to consumers who want to halt and reverse the developmen­t of diabetes. Found in natural health food stores, Certified Natural’s Glycemic Control contains a concentrat­ed form of brown seaweed called Insea2.

The controlled experiment­al results described last week involved two remarkable six-month trials. One involved pre-diabetic subjects; the other involved individual­s diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. In both studies, participan­ts took 250 mg of Insea2 30 minutes before each of three meals a day.

Results showed, for example, a 48 percent decrease in post-meal blood sugar surge by slowing down the digestion of carbohydra­tes. This means less insulin is needed to manage blood sugar, effectivel­y reducing demand on the pancreas. Similarly, the research showed a 39 percent reduction in glycemic stress resulting from sugar digestion.

Albert Einstein famously said, “No amount of experiment­ation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong.” Thus, in all things, there’s a measure of artfulness in determinin­g what combinatio­n of factors will be sufficient to convince you of a truth.

But there’s nothing like personal experience to determine the formula that will work for you. So if you are pre-diabetic or have type 2 diabetes, why not try to replicate the results of these remarkable studies? There are no dead bodies from people trying natural supplement­s, and while 250 mg of brown seaweed before each meal may not meet Einstein’s test of proof, you can watch for your own results. Maybe like the study participan­ts, you will see improvemen­ts in your ability to manage blood sugar levels, and that will be proof enough.

Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essays championed individual­ism in opposition to what he saw as negative societal trends, so this Gifford-jones article is an invitation to individual readers to take up a personal challenge.

Give it six months of committed effort, and then let us know your results.

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