News on the "Vegan Diet"
I was happy to see this ews Non the TV. I then followed the new release up because it is an important view of diets. It's being to prove and now moving toware concepts that we do not need to eat all the protein, dairy to loose weight or to control insulin with so much meat in the diabetic diets. I’m not a Vegan, thank you and doing well just to cut back on any consumption of meat and dairy in a vegetarian mode. More food (including all plant food) research needs to be done here by big Universities. However this big effort in the Health and Medical area is looking good. Vegan helps diabetics
This was posted, Jul 28th 2006 9:03 AM by Nicole Weston Filed under: Science, Vegan, Health & Medical A study organized by researchers at George Washington University, the University of Toronto and the University of North Carolina, in conjunction with the Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine, has concluded that following a low-fat, vegan diet may actually reverse the symptoms of diabetes. The study had participants with type II diabetes and assigned them to either a vegan diet or the standard American Diabetes Association diet. Vegans cut out all animal products, including dairy and meat, and had less refined sugar. The ADA diet varies based on factors such as body weight, cholesterol, so it is much more specific in what dieters can eat. The vegan diet was easier to follow because the people in that group did not have to count calories or measure portion sizes, unlike the ADA diet, and this was evidenced by the fact that fewer people in the vegan group dropped out of the study than in the other group. By the end of the study, which lasted 22 weeks, "43 percent of those on the vegan diet and 26 percent of those on the standard diet were either able to stop taking some of their drugs such as insulin or glucose-control medications, or lowered the doses." An additional benefit was the weight loss (14-lb on the vegan diet, 6.8-lb non-vegan) many participants experienced. The results of the study are an indicator that dietary changes can have a significant impact on health and some physicians hope that such changes will be considered as a first line of treatment in cases of type II diabetes, instead of automatically reverting to drugs. In all probability, a combination of the two will work the best, but actually seeing a reversal of the effects of diabetes is strong evidence and will hopefully motivate more people to change their diets.
http://shermsorganicnews.blogspot.com/2008/10/plant-based-diet-reversal-to-diseases.html
Enjoy the following Meatrix (cartoon video) You can hear The Meatrix, you watch it with subtitles in English or other.
http://shermssorganicnews.blogspot.com/2008/09/parasites.html
http://shermsrecipes.blogspot.com/2010/09/proof-of-no-meat-eating.html
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