Club FM Interview | World Diabetes Day Special
On World Diabetes Day, I had the privilege to speak on Club FM about a topic close to my heart — reversing diabetes through real change, not fad fixes.
I broke down the myths around diabetes, starting with this truth: Real food heals. Not powders, pills, or packaged “healthy” snacks — but natural, local, unprocessed foods that nourish your body at the cellular level.
We explored the forgotten pillars of health: quality sleep, stress management, daily movement, and deep mindset shifts. Because managing diabetes isn’t just about food — it’s about the life you live around that food.
I also addressed a common myth: “You need willpower to lose weight.” The truth? Willpower is not the problem. The real issue is poor metabolic health caused by the wrong food, broken habits, and misinformation. Most people aren’t weak — they’re just misled.
From pre-diabetes to full-blown type 2, the solution isn’t a one-size-fits-all diet. It’s a personalized, lifestyle-rooted, evidence-based journey that restores insulin sensitivity, reduces visceral fat, and builds sustainable health from the inside out.
Thank you, Club FM, for the platform to speak truth and spark a movement — because managing diabetes should be about empowerment, not restriction.
On World Diabetes Day, I was invited to share insights on Club FM about managing and reversing diabetes through lifestyle. I emphasized the power of real, unprocessed foods over fad diets and artificial supplements. We discussed how sleep, stress, and daily habits play a critical role in blood sugar control. I highlighted the dangers of misinformation, quick fixes, and restrictive diets, offering instead practical, sustainable solutions rooted in clinical nutrition, functional medicine, and lifestyle medicine. A meaningful conversation to inspire lasting change.
On the occasion of **World Diabetes Day**, I had the privilege of being interviewed on **Club FM**, where we delved deep into one of today’s most pressing health issues — **diabetes and prediabetes** — and how it can be tackled effectively without medications or extreme diets.
During the conversation, I emphasized the **power of real food** in reversing and managing metabolic diseases. Today, many people are confused by mixed messages from social media and marketing campaigns that promote fad diets, detox teas, supplements, and meal replacements. But healing begins when we return to what’s natural, local, seasonal — **real food, prepared with love and eaten with awareness**.
We also discussed the **key pillars of lifestyle medicine** — not just food, but also **sleep, stress management, movement, and emotional health**. I shared how irregular sleep, chronic stress, and sedentary habits silently worsen insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction, often before any symptoms even appear.
I highlighted how **fad diets** may give temporary weight loss but fail to address the root causes of diabetes. In fact, many of these trends do more harm than good by creating fear around food, reducing nutrient intake, and ignoring individual biology.
Instead, I offered **simple, evidence-based solutions** for reversing diabetes and prediabetes:
✅ Eating real, whole foods based on your metabolism
✅ Prioritizing sleep quality and recovery
✅ Managing stress through faith, breathing, and mindfulness
✅ Moving daily — even light activity matters
✅ Regular monitoring and personalized interventions, not one-size-fits-all advice
It was a powerful opportunity to break myths, raise awareness, and inspire people to take back control of their health — naturally and sustainably.
**Real food heals. Lifestyle transforms. Diabetes can be reversed.**
That was the core message of this heartfelt conversation.
This extensive clinical practice guideline from the Endocrine Society provides evidence-based recommendations on vitamin D use and testing for disease risk reduction across various populations. It addresses questions regarding empiric supplementation versus no supplementation and routine 25(OH)D testing versus no testing for different age groups, pregnant individuals, and those with specific conditions like prediabetes, dark complexion, and obesity. The guideline emphasizes evaluating the certainty of evidence using the GRADE methodology and considers factors like patient values, costs, feasibility, and health equity. Ultimately, it aims to offer clarity on optimal vitamin D intake and the role of testing in individuals without established vitamin D deficiencies.
Source: The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2024, 109, 1907–1947
https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgae290
Advance access publication 3 June 2024
Clinical Practice Guideline