SCHWARZBEIN
PRINCIPAL DIET PLAN





WHAT
IS THE SCHWARZBEIN PRINCIPAL DIET?
Dr.
Diana Schwarzbein is a an endocrinologist who worked with type 2 diabetics
at her first medical clinic following her residency and internship. In
the beginning, Dr. Schwarzbein followed the standard dietary and pharmaceutical
protocols for adult-onset diabetes: a high carbohydrate, low-protein,
lowfat diet in conjunction with oral diabetes medications. Things started
to change, however, when, in response to pleas from her patients, she
allowed them more red meat and fat in their Spartan diets—things
that are supposed to make diabetes worse, according to her medical training.
Schwarzbein
then noticed that the blood sugar profiles of several of her patients
improved considerably. When she quizzed them as to what they'd done differently,
they all confessed to the same "crime": instead of eating just
a little more red meat and fat in their diets as she told them, they ate
lots of the forbidden foods while simultaneously dropping their carbohydrate
intake. Dr. Schwarzbein had to admit the obvious: the standard of care
for adult-onset diabetes was wrong. From that point on, she changed her
whole approach to diabetes and nutritional health in general, realizing
the dangers of high-carbohydrate diets and the misinformation on saturated
fats promulgated by the establishment.
The Schwarzbein
Principle should be subtitled "Everything You Wanted to Know About
Insulin Resistance, But Were Afraid to Ask." It is an important antidote
to the many books promoting lowfat or low-protein diets for insulin resistance.
Schwarzbein links high insulin levels, primarily caused by high-carbohydrate,
lowfat diets to heart disease, cancer, diabetes, oxidative stress, depression,
eating disorders and obesity.
Her sensible
approach to weight loss and general health is a lower carbohydrate, higher
fat, moderate protein diet of natural foods. She points out that those
who get a lot of exercise, such as athletes, need to eat more carbohydrates
for energy. But for those who are more sedentary, excess carbohydrates
will cause weight gain.
The great
asset of the book is its down-to-earth explanations of complex biochemical
processes—the reader is not left confused by endocrinological double-talk.
Our Thumbs
Up is qualified because of several serious errors. Schwarzbein endorses
processed soy foods (listed in several of the menu plans) and canola oil
products. For a book that exhorts readers to avoid "man-made foods,"
these recommendations are strange indeed. Schwarzbein is also curiously
down on coconut oil and incorrectly states that heating of oils creates
trans-fatty acids—wrong on both counts.
For a weight
loss program you can live with, though, as well as a sensible eating pattern
that does not relegate saturated fats to the realm of poisons, The Schwarzbein
Principle is a good pick.
SCHWARZBEIN
PRINCIPAL DIET LINKS
Schwarzbein
Principal -
The office site of The Schwarzbein Principal Diet.
SCHWARZBEIN
PRINCIPAL DIET ARTICLES AND REVIEWS
Schwarzbein
Principal Diet Summary - Summary of what the diet is about.
The
Schwarzbein Principle - Summary by About.com
The
Schwarzbein Principle - The book is very much based on the
low carbohydrate eating plans that are so popular at the moment. It is
not really a diet, as much as a way of life.
Schwarzbein
Principle - Dr. Diana Schwarzbein is the endocrinologist
to the stars.




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