This book is for people who have been told diagnosed as bordelrine diabetics, have risk factors for diabetes, or have been diagnosed with diabetes. It also provides information specific to those of East Asian heritage that is more specific than standard Western recommendations.
The author is a physician and diabetes researcher who recommends diet, exercise, and lifestyle changes to address blood sugar issues. He explains how diabetes is developed, the way different risks and behaviors increase your likelihood of developing it, and he backs everything up with multiple research studies.
The first half of the book is dedicated to explaining what diabetes is, how you develop it, how it affects your body, and what influences its progression. He then goes into a description of the elements of his 12-week plan to change your diet, exercise, and stress levels. He explains the importance of each element and backs those up with published research studies as well.
The second half of the book is the day-by-day plan to incorporate each of his recommended elements into your life. The nice thing here is that he progressively adds behaviors over the 12 week period. The diet is a standard whole-grain, low-fat diet. The exercise is a mix of aerobic and strength-building, he wants people to lose a bit of weight, and to activate their physiology in ways to help increase insulin sensitivity. This includes getting enough sleep and managing stress.
Some of the practices could be expensive and require special equipment. The author disagrees with the high-fat and high-protein diets, despite evidence that they can be beneficial as well. He doesn't show that those other practices are harmful, bust focuses of showing that his way works. He also doesn't have any products he's selling--he gives name brands of various products like supplements or cold vests (to stimulate brown fat).
This is a book for someone who wants to go deeper into what diabetes is and how to combat it without medication. It is really meant for people who are not insulin-dependent, though they would likely benefit as well.
I received a copy for review through NetGalley.