Saturday, July 30, 2005

Diet, Exercise Top Drugs in Preventing Diabetes
Two studies find lifestyle changes are the better, cheaper option

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, Feb. 25 (HealthDay News) -- Preventing diabetes with diet and exercise may be not only possible, especially among nonsmokers, but also more cost-effective than medication.

So say two studies appearing in the March 1 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.

One study found diet and exercise modifications reduced the risk of developing diabetes in nonsmoking men. The second study, a computer simulation, found a diet and exercise program was cheaper than using a pill when it came to preventing the disease.

The issue of preventing type 2 diabetes is looming as one of the most pressing public health issues of the 21st century, with two-thirds of U.S. adults now overweight or obese. The number of people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes is rising even as the age at which they are diagnosed is falling.

The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), a trial published in 2002, found intensive lifestyle interventions such as diet or exercise were more effective than the diabetes pill metformin in preventing the onset of type 2 diabetes. The trial involved people with impaired glucose tolerance, often a precursor to diabetes.

Since then, the question has been: how to make such lifestyle programs work.

"There has been a debate about how to implement lifestyle intervention," said study author Dr. William Herman, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan School of Medicine. "The word on the street is that it can't be done. It's too expensive." Herman himself used to belong to this camp, he noted.

What changed his mind was this study, which involved a computer simulation using data from the DPP. The researchers compared the cost-effectiveness of diet and exercise programs in preventing diabetes versus either the use of the drug metformin, or placebo.

Both the lifestyle program and the metformin program reduced the risk of developing diabetes among people with abnormal blood sugar levels. The diet-exercise program, however, cost society about $8,800 while taking the pill cost about $29,000 per year of healthy life saved. Unlike the lifestyle strategy, the metformin program was not cost-effective after the age of 65, the researchers added.

Diet and exercise delayed the onset of type 2 diabetes by about 11 years, while metformin delayed the onset by about three years.

"The bottom line is that is even though everything but the kitchen sink was thrown in, the intensive lifestyle intervention is more cost-effective than a pill," Herman said. "We have to find better ways to implement it in clinical public health practice."

One such way would be to convince public and private health insurance programs to cover things such as health club memberships, Herman said.

Some are not convinced by the findings, however.

"This was a hard pill for me to swallow," said Dr. Stuart Weiss, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at New York University School of Medicine. "I have very few patients who will go to a class on lifestyle issues." That means Weiss has to spend time in face-to-face discussions with the patient.

Also, he added, many classes are not effective and may even teach participants bad habits.

Dr. Nathaniel Clark, national vice president for clinical affairs at the American Diabetes Association, said doctors need to focus on individual patients before thinking about cost-effectiveness across health plans, or in the health-care system as a whole.

"The first thing we need is to motivate the patient to make the lifestyle change or this type of study will do nothing," he said. "One would hope it would be helpful in getting either the health-care system or health plan to ask, 'Is it worth my investment to pay for these sorts of services?'"

The second study involved 11,827 men who had normal glucose levels at the beginning of the trial. Some of the men were assigned to a program aimed at modifying their diet, helping them to quit smoking and increasing physical activity, while the others were provided with "usual care."

Overall, roughly the same percentage of people in both groups (about 11 percent) developed diabetes over a six-year period. However, nonsmokers in the lifestyle program were less likely to develop diabetes than nonsmokers in the usual care group.

"This study gives tremendous support for the concept that we shouldn't look only for people who have abnormal blood glucose levels and say 'You need to lose weight and be more active.' We should really be doing that as a society," Clark said. "Let's try to move further and further back down the time frame, so that ultimately the goal is really to have people be born healthy and then remain healthy through their lives."

Both studies seemed to be giving the same message: lifestyle programs work.

"If patients ate properly and exercised well, then diabetes would definitely not be as big an issue," Weiss said. "Evidence is accumulating, and we just need for people to accept it."

More information

The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases can tell you more about type 2 diabetes.



Saturday, July 09, 2005


http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=192635;article=7400;show_parent=1
Clifford E. Carnicom
A MEETING
Fri Jul 8, 2005 11:34am



A Meeting

By Clifford E Carnicom


A meeting has taken place recently between an investigative researcher and a well placed military source. The identity of both parties is to be protected. The source has intimate knowledge of at least one aspect of the aerosol operations, and asserts the following:

1. The operation is a joint project between the Pentagon and the pharmaceutical industry.

2. The Pentagon wishes to test biological diseases for war purposes on unsuspecting populations. It was stated that SARS is a failure as the expected rate of mortality was intended to be 80%.

3. The pharmaceutical industry is making trillions on medications designed to treat both fatal and non-fatal diseases given to populations.

4. The bacteria and viruses are freeze-dried and then placed on fine filaments for release.

5. The metals released along with the diseases heat up from the sun, creating a perfect environment for the bacteria and viruses to thrive in the air supply.

6. Most countries being sprayed are unaware of the activities and they have not consented to the activities. He states that commercial aircraft flying are one of the delivery systems.

7. Most of the "players" are old friends and business partners of the senior Bush.

8. The ultimate goal is the control of all populations through directed and accurate spraying of drugs, diseases, etc.

9. People who have tried to reveal the truth have been imprisoned and killed.

10. This is the most dangerous and dark time that I have experienced in all of my years of serving this country.


This information is relayed without qualification, as I am knowledgeable in the level of integrity of the researcher that has made this information available to the public. There is both risk and restraint that has been exercised in the preparation of this statement.


Clifford E Carnicom
Jul 26 2003

http://www.carnicom.com/meeting.htm
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http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=192635;article=7401;show_parent=1
Robert McNamara
Re: A MEETING
Fri Jul 8, 2005 11:38am



"There are only 2 possible ways a world of 10 Billion people can be averted. Either the current Birth rates must come down more quickly or current death rates must go up. There is no other way. There are of course many ways in which the death rates can go up.

In a thermonuclear age, Wars can accomplish it very quickly and decisively. Famine and disease are nature's ancient check on population growth and neither one has disappeared from the scene.

To put it simply: Excessive population growth is the greatest obstacle to the economic and social advancement of most societies of the developing world." [emphasis added]

(Robert Mcnamara, October 2, 1979).

http://www.africa2000.com/INDX/tukur.htm


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