Before
& After:
14 Patients Share Their Experiences /
Read It Online!
Harvey Kent is fifty-one.
He has known about his diabetes for approximately
six years, and we suspect that he probably had it
for three to four years prior to his diagnosis. He
has a family history of diabetes, and his story is
fairly typical.
"I went in for a routine
physical. I've always had high risk factors—both my
parents had diabetes, my brother had diabetes, and
my sister has diabetes. My brother, who was forty-nine,
passed away recently from diabetic complications.
My sister, who is fifty-nine, is on dialysis. When
I found out I had it, I felt I was going down the
same slippery slope. I'd been trying to lose weight,
but not very successfully. The doctor I was seeing,
an endocrinologist, kept upping my medication. Every
time I went to see him, I wound up taking more and
more, and my blood sugars weren't going anywhere but
up.
"I kept having the
feeling that as far as treatment went, nothing was
happening. I wasn't in bad shape, but then I watched
my brother pass away, and I thought, 'I've got to
do something.'
"I happen to live
in Mamaroneck, New York, near Dr. Bernstein, and my
wife suggested that I see him for a second opinion.
I kept wondering, 'Is there another approach?' That's
really how it started. The standard approach was always
to tell me to lose weight, to exercise, and to take
medication. I was trying to do all those things, but
I wasn't having much success at any of them except
the taking of medication. As it turned out, Dr. Bernstein
still said the same three things, but his approach
to each of the categories was radical, especially
on the diet. The diet has been a major factor—I've
lost a lot of weight.
"Once I started getting
a sense of what Dr. B. was talking about—which was
really right from the first visit; he's very thorough
in his explanations—I kind of figured it out. Just
to demonstrate the effects of diet, he told me to
stay on my same diet and measure my blood sugars,
but I started cutting back on the carbohydrates, so
by the time we sat down to negotiate a meal plan,
which was maybe the third or fourth session, he just
confirmed what I'd already started about a month before.
"Before I met Dr.
Bernstein, I'd been under treatment for diabetes by
three different doctors. The guy I was seeing before
Dr. B. is an endocrinologist/diabetes doctor with
a fairly large practice. He never once said to me,
'You know, by controlling your blood sugars, most
of these complications are reversible.' When Dr. B.
told me that—well, for a diabetic who's stuck with
this disease for the rest of his life, that's nice
to hear. Nobody ever tells you this. At least I don't
remember anyone ever explaining this to me. I've been
a member of the ADA [American Diabetes Association]
for several years, and no one ever said anything like
that to me, anywhere. I was lucky. I hadn't developed
that many complications—not like my brother and sister—but
I knew how fast they could get you.
"With
my old doctor, I'd been told to monitor my blood sugars
and then come in every three months. What it was supposed
to do, I wasn't sure—keep you honest, maybe, but I
couldn't figure that out. I was checking my fasting
blood sugars in the mornings. They were averaging
somewhere about 140 mg/dl. And when I'd go in, the
doctor would do blood work, scratch the bottoms of
my feet, and check my eyes, then say, 'See me in three
months.' The whole thing would take maybe half an
hour and then I'd see him again in three months. I
wasn't sure what the whole thing was about. The thing
is—and I found this out with my sister and my brother—it's
a slippery slope. You start out as a Type II and you
get this kind of treatment, and you burn out your
pancreas, and before long, you're insulin-dependent.
"When
I saw Dr. B., he did a very extensive medical exam
and uncovered everything there was to uncover. He
checked everything. He found that I had an anemia,
and so we started doing things to deal with that.
I had not had retinopathy or neuropathy. I had some
protein in my urine, a potential sign of kidney disease.
But he said that could be from my old kidney stone,
or it could be from the diabetes. He said we'd wait
awhile until my blood sugars were normalized, then
test again and find out, because if it was the diabetes,
it should clear up.
"The first thing he
did was get me off Micronase and onto Glucophage.
Micronase is one of those oral hypoglycemic agents
that stimulate your pancreas, and he said, 'Why are
you doing this? You're burning your pancreas out quick.'
He looked at my blood sugars carefully and told me
I was low at particular times of the day and told
me what I had to do to cover the valleys as well as
the peaks. Insulin. I never wanted to take insulin.
My father did it, and the idea just brought back horrible
memories. My other doctor would say, 'All else is
failing, now you have to go on insulin.' What Bernstein
says is, 'I want you to take insulin in order to cover
your peaks and to keep your pancreas from burning
out.' This seems to me a much more sensible approach.
"My wife is very perceptive
about the whole thing, and she said what I really
needed was a coach, and Bernstein is very much like
a coach. Having read up about him and knowing that
he was an engineer, you can see the difference in
his approach. You can see less of the medical model
and more of an engineering model: he's putting you
back together, taking your components and manipulating
them in order to accomplish something. He's a diabetic
himself, he knows the thing inside and out, and so
you get the sense that he's much more actively involved.
Now I measure my blood sugars 5 times a day, but instead
of just jotting them down and saying come back in
three months, he adjusts the medication, using it
to tweak the peaks and valleys, to get the most optimum
response. Now I have excellent control.
"The diet takes some
getting used to. Most diabetics, I would surmise,
love to eat. Especially if you come from a culture
where food is the coin of the realm. People ask me
now, 'What do you eat?' I say, 'I have turkey, some
salad, and a Diet Coke.' I used to be a big pancake
eater. Talk about your carbohydrate! Every Saturday
and Sunday morning for years I would make pancakes
for my wife. Now I make them for her and for my daughter
and don't have any—or occasionally steal just a bite—and
I miss it, but I am so much more in control now, and
I feel so much better. I've seen so much of my family
go down the slippery slope, it seems a small sacrifice
for good health.
"Since the time I
started seeing Dr. Bernstein, I've lost close to 30
pounds. My blood sugars have dropped by about 35 percent,
but my weight loss was not on a weight loss diet,
just on Dr. Bernstein's meal plan. I still have
a way to go, but for the first time I feel like I'm
in control."
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