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Reasons to Quit Smoking: Diabetes Linked to Smoking, Harvard Says

[ Posted in: Reasons To Quit Smoking, All Postings, Smoking Cessation on December 12th, 2007 ]

It is surprising that this one took as long to get researched as it did. I have pointed to the link between the enormous amounts of added sugars in cigarettes and smokers’ bloodsugar levels for many years.

This does not only lead to diabetes or hypoglycemia - the sugars also make it harder for smokers to quit smoking!

Some of them are:  

 - juice concentrates of apple, apricot, beet, fig, grape, pineapple, plum, prune, and raisin

 - chocolate, honey, malt, maple syrup, maltodextrin, molasses, rum, sugar, sugar alcohol, and wine sherry

 - many sugar-like chemicals, like sucrose octaacetate, for example

- Franc Tausch, PhD, CCHT

Smokers should be screened for type 2 diabetes and encouraged to quit smoking to prevent it, two Boston researchers recommend based on a new review of studies linking smoking and diabetes.

Already the leading cause of preventable death around the world, smoking has now been tied to a 44 percent higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes, Swiss researchers report in a review of 25 studies of 1.2 million people, published in tomorrow’s ‘Journal of the American Medical Association’.

Two Harvard researchers, writing in an editorial that also appears in the journal, call on physicians to test smokers for diabetes and encourage them to quit smoking.

Current US Preventive Services Task Force guidelines suggest screening adults with high blood pressure and high cholesterol while the American Diabetes Association recommends testing adults 45 and older every three years.

“Given the increased incidence of type 2 diabetes associated with smoking, it is likely important and prudent for clinicians also to screen for and carefully monitor glucose levels among current and former smokers,” write Eric L. Ding and Dr. Frank B. Hu of the Harvard School of Public Health, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Harvard Medical School.

“Major population prevention of type 2 diabetes is achievable by avoidance of smoking and modification of lifestyle factors through a combination of healthy weight control, regular physical activity, moderate alcohol intake, and proper diet.”

Source

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