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Click the links below to jump to various excerpts from Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution. Most of the excerpts are more than one page in length and are filled with interesting facts and important knowledge from Dr. Bernstein. Enjoy them!

Foreword by Frank Vinicor, M.D., M.P.H.

My First 50 Years As a Diabetic
In this chapter, Dr. Bernstein tells the remarkable story of his life, including his self-discovered technique for controlling his blood sugars, recovery from over a half-dozen common diabetes-related conditions, and the conflict he encountered with the medical community which still doesn't believe it's possible. 
 
Before & After: 14 Patients Share Their Experiences
Much of it in their own words, 14 of Dr. Bernstein's patients tell the stories of their lives before trying his solution and the life-changing results they experienced as a result.
 
Chap. 1: Diabetes: The Basics
Diabetes 101, including the difference between Type I and Type II diabetes. As a Type I diabetic himself, Dr. Bernstein offers personal insight.

Chap. 2: Tests: A Baseline Measure of Your Disease and Risk Profile
 
Chap. 3: Your Diabetic Tool Kit: Supplies You Will Need and Where to Get Them
 
Chap. 4: How and When to Measure Blood Sugar
 
Chap. 5: Recording Blood Sugar Data: Using the GLUCOGRAF II Data Sheet
 
Chap. 6: Strange Biology: Phenomena Peculiar to Diabetes That Can Affect Blood Sugar  

Chap. 7: The Laws of Small Numbers
How exactly can you learn to predict your blood sugars? Dr. Bernstein answers the question in this chapter.

Chap. 8: Establishing a Treatement Plan: The Basic Treatment Plans and How We Structure Them  

Chap. 9: The Basic Food Groups, or Much of What You've Been Taught About Diet is Probably Wrong
Dr. Bernstein's reduces the complex "food pyramid" to three food groups, and warns how damaging the typical American diet can be to diabetics and nondiabetics alike.
 
Chap. 10: Diet Guidelines: Basic Treatment for All Diabetics
Prepare for some big surprises about the foods we've come to believe were really "sugar-free" and learn which types of foods Dr. Bernstein advocates in his diet plan for diabetics.

Chap. 11: Creating a Customized Meal Plan  

Chap. 12: Weight Loss--If You're Overweight
Scientific insight about why people become overweight, plus methods for you to lose weight the right way.

Chap. 13: Using Exercise to Enhance Insulin Sensitivity

Chap. 14: Oral Hypoglycemic Agents
Valuable knowledge about the various OHA's, including Dr. Bernstein's dosage regimens, benefits and some possible side effects.

Chap. 15: Insulin: The Basics of Self-Injection
 
Chap. 16: Important Information About Various Insulins
 
Chap. 17: Simple Insulin Regimens
 
Chap. 18: Intensive Insulin Regimens
 
Chap. 19: How to Prevent and Correct Low Blood Sugars
 
Chap. 20: How to Cope with Dehydrating Illness
 
Chap. 21: Delayed Stomach-Emptying: Gastroparesis
 
Chap. 22: Routine Follow-up Visits to Your Physician

Chap. 23: What You Can Expect from Virtually Normal Blood Sugars
Coming out of the dark...Dr. Bernstein offers hope for what physical and mental changes normalized blood sugars can do for you.
 
Appendix A: What About the Widely Advocated Dietary Restrictions on Fat, Protein, and Salt, and the Current High-Fiber Fad?
Dr. Bernstein answers with real-world, common-sense scientific analysis of why certain foods have been stressed as "good" and others as "bad" by the medical establishment.

Appendix B: Don't Permit Hospitalization to Impair Your Blood Sugar Control
 
Appendix C: Drugs That May Affect Blood Glucose Levels
 
Appendix D: Recipes for Low-Carbohydrate Meals

Appendix E: Foot Care for Diabetics
Foot-saving advice for diabetics, including a list of do's and don'ts to help keep you on your feet for years to come.

Glossary & Index

 
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Before & After:
14 Patients Share Their Experiences
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LeVerne Watkins is a sixty-eight-year-old grandmother and associate executive director of a social service agency. When we first met, she had been taking insulin for two years, after developing Type II diabetes thirteen years earlier. Her comments relate in part to the effects of large amounts of dietary carbohydrate, covered by large amounts of insulin, while she was following a conventional treatment plan.

"In less than two years, my weight had increased from 125 to 155 pounds; my appetite was always ready for the next snack or the next meal. All my waking hours were focused on eating. I always carried a bag of goodies—unsalted saltine crackers, regular Coca-Cola, and glucose tablets. I always had to eat 'on time.' If I was a half-hour late at mealtime, my hands would begin sweating, I would become very jittery, and if in a social gathering or a conference or meeting at work, I would have to force myself to concentrate on what was taking place. During a meeting that I was chairing, the last thing I remember saying was, 'Oh, I'm so sorry,' before I toppled out of the chair to wake up and find myself in the emergency room of a local hospital.

"During a subway ride which generally took about 25 minutes, the train was delayed for close to 2 hours and—to my utter dismay—I had forgotten my bag of goodies. As I felt myself 'going bananas,' sweating profusely and perhaps acting a little strange, a man sitting across from me recognized my Medic Alert bracelet, grabbed my arm, and screamed, 'She has diabetes!'

"Food, juice, candy bars, cookies, and fruit came from all directions. It was a cold, wintery day, but people fanned and fed me. And I was so grateful and so very embarrassed. I stopped riding the subway, and rescheduled as many meetings and conferences as I could to take place directly after lunch so that I would have more time before the next snack or meal would be necessary.

"I felt that I had no control over my life; I was constantly eating, I outgrew all my clothing, shoes and underwear included. I had been a rather stylish dresser since college days. Now I felt rather frumpy, to say the least. Once, I tried to discuss with my diabetologist how I was feeling about gaining weight and eating all the time. I was told, 'You just don't have any willpower,' and 'If you put your mind to it, you wouldn't eat so much.' I was very, very angry, so much so that I never consulted him again.

"On my own, I tried Weight Watchers, but the diet I had been given by the dietitian to whom the diabetologist had referred me did not mesh with the Weight Watchers diet. So along I limped, trying to accept that I was getting fatter each day, was always hungry, had no willpower, and most of the time was feeling unhappy.

"My husband was my constant support through all this. He would say, 'You look good with a few more pounds....Go buy yourself some new clothes,' especially when I would ask him to zip something that I was trying to squeeze into. He always clipped newspaper and magazine articles about diabetes and would remind me to watch specials on TV. He encouraged me to be active in the local diabetes association, and would accompany me to lectures and various workshops. Then, on Sunday, April 3, 1988—Easter Sunday—he clipped an article from the New York Times entitled 'Diabetic Doctor Offers a New Treatment.' Little did I realize that this thin news article would be a new beginning of my life with diabetes. I must have read it several dozen times before I finally met with Dr. Bernstein. Since that first meeting, I haven't had one single episode of hypoglycemia, which I had formerly experienced very often. Following the regimen of correcting my high and low blood sugars, taking small doses and different kinds of insulin, and eating meals calibrated for specific amounts of carbohydrates and protein, my outlook brightened and I began to feel more energetic and more in charge of myself and my life. I could now hop on the train, ride the subway, drive several hours, and not fear one of those low blood sugar episodes. I started once again to exercise every day. My stamina seemed to increase. I didn't have to push hard to accomplish my daily goals at work and at home. Within a couple of months, I was back to 129 pounds, had gone from size 14 to size 10, and ten months later to size 8 and 120 pounds. Even the swelling and pain in my right knee—arthritis, I was told—subsided. I feel great. My self-esteem and self-worth are whole again. I now take only 8 units of insulin each day, where I had previously been taking 31 units.

"I am also conquering my uneasy and frightening feelings about the long-term consequences of having diabetes. While I once thought that heart disease, kidney failure, blindness, amputations, and many other health problems were what the future probably held for me, I now believe that they are not necessarily outcomes of living with diabetes.

"But my life is not perfect. I still occasionally throw caution to the wind by eating too much and eating foods I know are taboo. Sticking with my diet of no bread, no fruit, no pasta, no milk, seemed easy when it was new, but now it is not easy, and loads of my efforts go into making salads, meat, fish, or poultry interesting and varied. My fantasies are almost always of some forbidden food—a hot fudge sundae with nuts, or my mother's blueberry cobbler topped with homemade ice cream. But when all is told, I feel that I am really lucky. All my efforts have really paid off."

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