Diabetes can usually be reversed, but the medical system is poor at this, leaving you on your own to find out how to do this for yourself.
Diabetes is a major disease. In the UK ,1 person in 25 has been diagnosed with diabetes, 1 in 60 has diabetes without knowing it, and perhaps 1 in 10 has metabolic syndrome, which is the precursor to diabetes. Are you in one of these groups?
The common form of diabetes is called Type 2 Diabetes. It used to be called Late Onset Diabetes, because it didn’t normally happen to people under 40 years old, but has been renamed as it is now commonly occurring in children and teenagers.
Modern medicine is poor at reversing diabetes. The first part of treatment is where the doctor will tell you to eat properly and exercise more. This rarely has any effect because it requires a complete rethink about your lifestyle which produced the diabetes in the first place, and this isn’t an overnight process. When this fails your doctor turns to drug therapy, which is really just a damage limitation exercise. Drugs don’t cure or reverse diabetes, they just minimise some of the worst problems.
However, most diabetes is completely reversible. The problem is that it needs some effort, which most people aren’t willing to put in. Taking a pill is the modern way of coping with diabetes, but isn’t the answer, because the diabetes is still there, damaging your body, damaging your health and shortening your life.
For more information on diabetes see out main diabetes section.





















