Dr. Greger’s Daily Dozen

I had gestational diabetes when I was pregnant with Daniel. I never had to take insulin and it went away after his birth. Oddly, I didn’t have it during my pregnancy with Elizabeth and I say oddly because usually it gets worse as you get older. Most women who have the disease during one pregnancy will have it for subsequent ones. I attribute this anomaly to dietary changes I made when I was pregnant with Daniel. For instance, I haven’t had a glass of orange juice for more than ten years. I only drink tea, water, and the occasional beer.

Since then I have myself tested every one to two years for diabetes because I’m at higher risk of developing type 2 as I get older. I had my test done last week and the results are great: I am not a diabetic, not even a pre-diabetic. They’re better than last time and the last time was better than the time before. I’m like a good red wine that’s improving with age which is pretty unusual for diabetes.

The GP told me my risk is lower on a vegan diet which was great to hear. I’ve also changed my diet slightly over the past six months. Earlier this year I became interested in vegan diets as a cure for heart disease. I’m vegan for environmental and ethical reasons so I never concerned myself too much with the health benefits. However a family history of heart disease got me interested and I started reading a lot of Michael Greger’s stuff on NutritionFacts.org.

I realised I wasn’t a particularly healthy vegan. Over the past 6 months I’ve substantially increased my intake of vegetables and, in particular, green vegetables. Michael Greger has a terrific Daily Dozen checklist of foods we should eat everyday. It has made me realise that the health benefits of a vegan diet are probably not really due to the absence of meat, although it likely helps, and more to do with what replaces the meat: vegetables. One golden rule, according to Michael Greger, is that vegetables should take up half our plate. I don’t think this is the case for many people in our society. Most people in Western societies have a large portion of meat dominating their plate and maybe some bread or pasta on the side. This is certainly how it was for me growing up. I now make an effort to pile green vegetables of all kinds on my plate each day and my fridge always has a supply of cruciferous vegetables. There’s a compound in cruciferous vegetables that cannot be found anywhere else called sulforaphane which appears to target breast cancer cells.  It’s also apparently good as a treatment for autism. If you’re interested in diet and health then I recommend Dr. Greger’s Daily Dozen:

 


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5 responses to “Dr. Greger’s Daily Dozen”

  1. Steve Bloom Avatar
    Steve Bloom

    Hmm, flaxseeds have their own category. Interesting. Sadly I’m a fairly Bad Vegan, although I do get his newsletter and even look at it occasionally. Well, as the late Granny Weatherwax said so often, I aten’t dead yet.

    1. Rachel M Avatar

      I put ground flax in my porridge every day (porridge = oatmeal). You can sprinkle it in anything really. I also use it as an egg replacer. 1 tbsp ground flax + 3 tbsp water = 1 egg.

      It’s not that hard to change a diet. It’s just habit, I think.

  2. Steve Bloom Avatar
    Steve Bloom

    Oh sure. Went vegetarian ~35 years ago and vegan ~10 years ago; both involved habit changes. OTOH paying attention to what to eat seems harder than doing so with what not to eat, more detail and decisions being involved. Anything I can just do the same way every day will be easier, but that should work for flaxseed at least.

  3. Denise Avatar

    People at work tease me about all the vegetables I eat, which is mostly in jest, but some of them hint that they think I have an eating disorder just because vegetables make up such a large part of my diet, as opposed to the starches, sugars and fats that make up most of theirs. As a society, we are quite detached from what healthy diets and bodies actually look like.

    1. Rachel M Avatar

      Wow, that’s amazing! Most people don’t know what a healthy meal looks like. The message to eat more vegetables and whole grains just isn’t getting through.

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