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Mexico City food culture and diabetes
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notamiss



Joined: 20 Jun 2007
Posts: 908
Location: El 5o pino del la CDMX

PostPosted: Thu Mar 29, 2012 10:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

A big cluster of snack vendors gather outside every primary school at dismissal time. How many parents give in to their kid�s desires for a sweet treat, and make it a daily habit? Observation suggests that the answer is �many.�
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Dragonlady



Joined: 10 May 2004
Posts: 720
Location: Chillinfernow, Canada

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 1:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

wrote:
What amazes me is that in a country with an abundance of cheap, delicious, and healthy food options available diabetes is rampant and in general people are completely out of shape.
Is it being suggested that everyone with diabetes has this disease by choice?
May I suggest (those who care) do some reading, and enlighten themselves on the subject. Shocked

DL

http://www.worlddiabetesfoundation.org/composite-35.htm

- Insulin is vital for the survival of people with type 1 diabetes

- insulin is still not available on an uninterrupted basis in many parts of the developing world.

- In Latin America, families pay 40-60% of medical care expenditures from their own pockets.

- 80% of type 2 diabetes is preventable by changing diet, increasing physical activity and improving the living environment.

- Type 2 diabetes is responsible for 85-95% of all diabetes in high-income countries and may account for an even higher percentage in low- and middle-income countries.
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the peanut gallery



Joined: 26 May 2006
Posts: 264

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 3:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

It is being suggested that many people make poor choices regarding their health and well being. My post attempted to address the OP's question about food choices for diabetics in Mexico. No need to bust out the Wiki.
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MotherF



Joined: 07 Jun 2010
Posts: 1450
Location: 17�48'N 97�46'W

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 3:25 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dragonlady wrote:


- 80% of type 2 diabetes is preventable by changing diet, increasing physical activity and improving the living environment.

- Type 2 diabetes is responsible for 85-95% of all diabetes in high-income countries and may account for an even higher percentage in low- and middle-income countries.


While I certainly wouldn't say people have diabetes by choice--no one would choose that--the statistics you presented show that the vast majority of diabetes cases in Mexico could be/could have been prevented. As with a lot of issues all over the world, it's a case of most people not having access to the knowledge and resources that would allow them to prevent the disease.
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ton a bricks



Joined: 16 Sep 2006
Posts: 56
Location: Mexico City

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 4:08 pm    Post subject: Whole wheat bread Reply with quote

I wonder if the people saying whole wheat bread is easy to find in Mexico City really eat the stuff? It has been my experience to have to travel pretty far and wide to find it here, and even when I do, often when I go back for it they have run out or stopped stocking it. I would say about one in eight small panaderias have real whole wheat bread, and maybe one in four big supermarkets. I think partly because of the heat in Mexico, many businesses don't want to sell wholewheat bread because it goes rotten after a few days in the heat, whereas whitebread has no nutritional value so it just decays as opposed to rotting. Soriana stores do have wholewheat bread (centeno or rye) but in some stores it is 80% white flour while some it is the real thing.

I am not so sure I would tell someone who is diabetic that Mexico is a good place to settle unless they are really willing to devote a lot of time to their diet. I am not a diabetic, but don't eat sugar and it is an ongoing struggle to find foods that are not full of sugar, although it is the traditional diet that comes closest.
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ton a bricks



Joined: 16 Sep 2006
Posts: 56
Location: Mexico City

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 4:35 pm    Post subject: And another thing...! Reply with quote

Here is a link to an article about Pan Bimbo being sued a couple of years back for falsely claiming that their bread was wholewheat.

http://eleconomista.com.mx/negocios/2009/01/29/piden-sancion-bimbo-vender-pan-integral-falso
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MotherF



Joined: 07 Jun 2010
Posts: 1450
Location: 17�48'N 97�46'W

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I was going to say something about Bimbo. I think as well as Bimbo--most of the little panadarias are offering bread that is part whole wheat part not whole week and using panela instead of refined surgar to darken it so it looks "healthier".

Personally I think the answer is to eat less bread of any type. I will confess that I bought myself a bread machine in 1999, back before carry on restrictions were so tight, I carried it on the plane. I still use it at least once a week. But I don't eat bread everyday.

Notamiss have you tried getting flour in bulk at the market? Here I can buy trigo molido from wheat producers for 12 pesos a half kilo (recently gone up from 10). You might try a bulk dry goods seller at your local market, someone who sells amaranth and oats in bulk. They might have wheat too.
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notamiss



Joined: 20 Jun 2007
Posts: 908
Location: El 5o pino del la CDMX

PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 7:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the tip, I'll check it out. I've never paid attention to grains at the market.

Anyway, today I found whole wheat flour at the Comercial again. 14.50 per kilo bag.
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