Most people in their 30s could unknowingly be on the way to developing diabetes because of society’s carb-heavy diets, a top expert warned today.
Professor Joan Taylor, a diabetes expert based at Leicester’s De Montfort University, blamed current NHS nutrition guidance.
It states that carbohydrates — such as potatoes, bread and rice — should make up just over a third of what we eat.
But speaking at the British Science Festival, Professor Taylor called for this to be cut to just 10 per cent.
Professor Joan Taylor, a diabetes expert based at Leicester’s De Montfort University, blamed current NHS nutrition guidance. It states that carbohydrates — such as potatoes, bread and rice — should make up just over a third of what we eat. But speaking at the British Science Festival, Professor Taylor called for this to be cut to just 10 per cent
Eating less starchy foods could result in people losing weight – drastically slashing the risk of getting type 2 diabetes.
It will also help blood sugar levels come ‘down to normal’.
Starchy carbs tend to be calorie-dense, which is why they have been vilified over the past few decades.
Professor Taylor said: ‘If you can cut it down to 10 per cent, bearing in mind that the NHS recommendation is about 35 per cent, then not only will you lose weight, which is a good thing for metabolic syndrome and type 2, but your blood glucose comes down to normal.’
Type 2 diabetes occurs when the body does not make enough insulin, or if the insulin it makes doesn’t work properly — leading to high blood sugar levels.
Uncontrolled diabetes can lead to blindness and leave patients needing their limbs amputated or in a coma.
The condition affects roughly 4.5million Britons and more than 30m Americans. But hundreds of thousands are feared to be unknowingly walking around with the condition.
Unlike type 1 diabetes, which is genetic, type 2 diabetes is mainly driven by obesity. It is also reversible with a healthy lifestyle.
Professor Taylor said: ‘If you talk to diabetologists, they will tell you that most people from their 30s onwards, particularly if they’re BAME (Black, Asian and minority ethnic), but even so, are beginning to put on the kind of weight these days that means then moving into the metabolic syndrome, that then is a route to diabetes.
‘Most people are at risk.
‘It’s only the slim, athletic types that stay like that into their 30s and 40s that are not.
‘That’s an amazing thing, really.’
Metabolic syndrome is the medical term for a combination of diabetes, high blood pressure (hypertension) and obesity.
Diabetes UK estimates that one in three adults in the UK have pre-diabetes, which means their blood glucose levels are above normal but below the threshold for a diabetes diagnosis.
Around 90 per cent of people with diabetes have type 2, around 8 per cent have type 1 diabetes, and about 2 per cent have rarer types of diabetes.
NHS England suggests the service spends around £10billion a year on diabetes – around 10 per cent of its entire budget.
Research has shown that, for some people, diet, physical activity and sustained weight loss can be effective in reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes by about 50 per cent.