05/01/2019 / By Michelle Simmons
Type 2 diabetes is often caused by poor dietary habits and lifestyle choices. In fact, people who are obese are more likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than those who maintain a healthy weight.
Some health experts believe that this condition can be reversed by making healthy lifestyle changes, and this notion is supported by studies.
For example, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association randomly assigned more than 5,000 adults with Type 2 diabetes to either an intensive, lifestyle-based weight-loss program or a diabetes support and education program. After one year, 11.5 percent of the participants in the lifestyle change group experienced diabetes remission. Four years later, 7.3 percent of the participants who reduced their calorie intake, exercised more, and attended weekly counseling still experienced remission.
Diabetes remission is said to occur when a person has normal blood sugar levels despite not taking diabetes medication.
If you’re wondering how to increase your chances of remission, here are six lifestyle changes you can make.
Remission can take different forms. Partial remission occurs when a person manages to retain lower blood sugar levels than a person with diabetes for at least a year. This, of course, should happen without the use of diabetes medication. It can be considered complete remission if a person maintains their blood sugar level out of the diabetes or prediabetes range for at least one year without any medications. When this goes on for at least five years, it is called prolonged remission.
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