Assalamu'alaikum Warahmatullaahi Wabarakaatuh
Dear Readers.
DIABETES WARNING ON WHITE RICE
Dear Readers.
I download below an article which I read on the front page of the Daily Express of Friday 16th March, 2012 while I was in London. This paper was given to me by Encik Shahrir M. Ali who, besides being a blogger, is the Manager of Jeumpa D'Ramo.
Besides having diabetes, I am sure those unhappy unanimous commentators in my blog entries, are happy to know that I am also suffering from high-blood pressure and cardiac problems. As such when one finds that there is no entries in my blog one need not find any other reason.
My family friend Carl. M. Adams who now leaves in Alabama, USA, who is also a friend of the CEO of Krispy Kreeme doughnut, once offered me to be the franchisee of Krispy Kreeme for South East Asia when the company expressed their decision to venture overseas. I turned down the offer because Krispy Kreeme is not an anti-dote to diabetes.
I am therefore very concerned that all friends and 'foes', whether I know them or not, should be saved from the torment and expenses of looking after diabetes if you already have it and resort to prevention if you haven't got it. This advice also goes to my children and other family members. Here we go.
Millions who regularly eat it are at risk
By Jo Willey Health Correspondent
1. REGULARLY eating white rice can increase the risk of developing diabetes, experts warned last night.
2. The staple food, eaten by millions of Britons every day, raises the chance of getting type 2 diabetes, which is linked to obesity and poor diet.
3. The average Briton consumes nearly 10lb of rice a year, mainly as an accompaniment to curry.
4. And 95 per cent of the £900million of rice sold is the white variety, rather than the healthier brown.
5. Researchers at Harvard School of Public Health, in Boston, America, said that people from China and Japan have a much higher white rice intake than those in the West, averaging three to four servings a day, compared with our one or two servings a week.
6. But even for Western populations with lower rice intakes, the researchers said: “Relatively high white rice consumption may still modestly increase the risk of diabetes.”
7. Writing in the British Medical Journal, the authors concluded: “We found that higher rice consumption was associated with a significantly elevated risk of type 2 diabetes.”
8. The condition is up to six times more common in South Asian communities than in the general UK population and three times more common among people of African and African-Caribbean origin.
9. The Harvard team looked at two studies involving 350,000 people.
10. They took into account a variety of factors such as people’s weight, how much exercise they took and dietary issues such as red meat and alcohol intake.
11. All the people were free from diabetes at the start of the studies.
12. Over the next four to 22 years, around 13,200 of them developed the condition.
13. Previous studies suggest eating healthier brown rice may modestly decrease the risk of type 2 diabetes. But the authors said larger studies were needed to look at any benefits of substituting brown rice for white.
14. White rice is the main type of rice eaten worldwide and has high GI (glycaemic index) values.
15. High GI diets are associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes.
16. A previous study has shown that replacing a third of a typical serving of white rice with brown would lower the risk by 16 per cent.
17. Dr Katarina Kos, senior lecturer at the Peninsula College of Medicine & Dentistry in Plymouth, said: “The authors found that with each serving of white rice the relative risk of type 2 diabetes increases.
18. “Rice is the typical carbohydrate which accompanies meals, especially in Asian populations.
19. “The more rice/starchy food we have, the more likely we will also be to eat more of everything else.
20. “Diabetic patients are typically overweight if not obese. All of us should consider carefully whether we need a second helping.”
21. In an accompanying editorial to the report in the BMJ, Dr Bruce Neal, of the University of Sydney, said more and bigger studies were needed.
22. Catherine Collins, principal dietician at St George’s Hospital, London, said: “The review findings suggested that the risk of developing type 2 diabetes was higher in the Asian population but whether this was due to higher daily intakes of rice or to genetic predisposition could not be determined from this research.”
23. Dr Iain Frame, of Diabetes UK, said: “Previous research in this area has not provided conclusive results and it is a difficult area to conduct research because no single type of food is directly linked or associated with development of type 2 diabetes.”
Salam,
ReplyDeleteI'm 62, I eat rice all the time, but I don't have diabetes. If its true rice is the cause of diabetes, then all Asians are diabetics. The so-called white or polished rice are the culprit, so they say. But the truth is, they never really understand or just refused to understand the importance of the human exocrine system, but focus only on the endocrine system. Understand the human exocrine system, then diabetes is non-issue at all. Its all about digestion. Thank you.
Amat melucukan. Dalan tulisan terdahulu katanya "Yang anehnya ada juga yang berpendidikan lokal (tempatan) tetapi terperangkap, kerana kemewahan dan pendedahan di Barat, begitu rupa sehingga ada pemimpin yang dulunya berorientasikan Islam kini memperjuangkan"....
ReplyDeleteTetapi bila did berkunjung ka bandar London di negara Imperialis anatara yang mengasas kan Israel yang dia sendiri terperangkap dengan muslihat Zionis yang bertujuan untuk melumpuhkan industri padi dan Restoran India dan Cina yang makin popular dibarat.Kini turut menyebar propganda Zionis ini.
Kesemua Jabatan di Universiti Harvard di kuasai atau dipengaruhi oleh Zionists.Paling ketara Harvard Medical School dan kesemua rangkaian Hospitalnya di Boston Mass.Yang anehnya Harvard Medical Scoll ini pernah mendapat gran keuwangan MR 5.0 juta dari kerajaan UMNO Baru.Tidak kurang juga bantuan wang dari Saudi.