Garrett Darrington
24 June 2022
Diabetes and Ayurveda
Capstone Blog
Connections
in the Body
Ayurveda according to google is a
natural system of medicine that originated in India over 3000 years ago. I had
honestly never heard of this topic before just researching it, but I have heard
of other cultures using natural medicine to treat illness. It is interesting
that it is considered just as useful as regular western medicine in India to
the point the people will commonly use both to treat a patient. The balance
between the body and stress or anxiety is a common illness that this treatment
seems adapt at treating by balancing the body, and purifying it of harmful energy.
Ayurveda is based upon 5 elements: space/ether, air/wind, fire, water, and
earth. Wind is the communication and movement of the body such as nervous
system, joints, elimination of waste and so on. Fire relates to the metabolic
process, and earth relates to the structure of the body such as tissues, bones,
and muscles. It is said that both Ayurveda and traditional Chinese medicine
focus is the patient rather than the disease, and I think that we can take a
lot of away from this in Western cultures. I feel like that in the West, we
have a tendency to look a disease and not a patient as much because doctors are
taught to solve the problem. This is becoming more of an issue because doctors
will not listen to patients. However, it is their body, and they would know
better than anymore how they feel and what’s going on.
I think the idea of a connection between our body in
itself is one of the most important concepts that Ayurveda teaches. The past
100 years has shown that our body is a complex ecosystem that is unique to each
and every person. This means that each person will work a little different when
it comes to connective body systems, and the idea that each system can connect
to each other can help people to really understand the importance of living a healthy
life style. I really like the idea of the connection between the body and
nature as well. Over the long period of humans surviving, and eventually
thriving, we learned how to become very in tune with our surroundings, but most
of that has been lost due to the advancement of technology. I heard a saying
once that said “Technology is how humans are evolving in today’s age, but it is
at the cost of our natural evolutions”. I think this saying couldn’t be truer
because we had cars, nice beds, and so many amenities that have made us kind of
squishy in the sense of the natural world. However, with the advancement of
medicine and antibiotics, we are able to outlive the past humans, but it
doesn’t mean that we are living any better than they would have been to an
extent.
This natural medicine has had some studies showing that
it can help with diabetes, arthritis, asthma, and anxiety. These things are
actually very prevalent in society, and I believe that a lot of these can be
helped with a diet change, or the natural remedies have chemical compounds that
are able to lessen or help the symptoms of these diseases. I really think that
it is a great concept that should be looked more into, and if it helps people
than that is all you can ask for. However, very few studies have been done into
the effects that are shown after doing treatments with natural remedies, and
the studies that are done don’t have a lot of backing to them. I do think that hospitals
should have knowledge of these natural medicine because it could help connect
with people that follow these set standards.
In conclusion, I think that Ayurveda is an amazing way
that could be cheaper especially in the US to treat lesser diseases, but if it
is not working looking into more western medicine could be a great move. I
think there could be grounds that it could be a great way to help people, but
until further research is done into the effects then it will just be kind of a
side bar to Western medicine.
A wide spread disease that is known
as diabetes has a lot of known causes from obesity to the body not running
correctly which means creating insulin or properly using insulin that is
created in the body. This disease is said to been affecting 1/10 Americans, and
it is one of the widest spread diseases up there with depression and heart
disease. The papers that we had provided for us contained information about how
low glucose levels can lead to an increase in angry feeling which might lead to
more altercations. This means that people with diabetes that cannot process
glucose properly may tend to be more aggressive than those who’s system
function properly. Another paper talked about how impulse control is affected
by the uptake of glucose as well because it takes energy to be able to exhibit
self-control to stop one for lashing out in anger. The last paper talked about
the consumption of alcohol along with having diabetes. This article talked
about the best types that should be consume, and that keeping a watchful eye on
people that have diabetes just in case they do go into diabetic shock.
I have a family member that has diabetes, and he has had
it the majority of his life. He didn’t really take great care of himself
because he used to drink all the time, and not watch his sugar levels. I have
even seen times when he has been really low, and it has caused him to go into
an episode of mania basically. Another example of having spent time with a
diabetic is my past boss. He was a very in shape person who enjoyed lots of
outdoor activities, and he got diabetes in his early 20’s. He drank a lot of MT
Dew which could have helped in him developing the disease, but he takes very
good care of himself. However, I remember in one of the articles it talked
about how drinking diet soda may not be the best choice because of all the
additives inside. I know that he drinks a lot of diet soda, so this was
interesting because my previous thoughts were that diet soda was very safe
especially for diabetics. This just goes to show that new information coming
out can challenge a previously held notion.
Reading about how diabetes happens because of obesity,
and it is usually a precursor to heart disease really makes me sad. Humans have
developed into such a great society, but we have taken to poisoning ourselves
with tons of sugar because it activates the dopamine in the brain. Also, the
lack of exercise in the US is below par, and I think the developing ways to get
people to do small things such as yoga or walking could help a lot of people
stay healthy.
Looking at the amount of money that people who have
diabetes and what it will cost them with and without insurance is absurd. When
the average amount of money spent on medical bills is 2.3 times that a person
without diabetes will spend makes me consider why it is so high. One of the
main reasons seems to be that people are unable to take care of themselves or
afford insulin because of price gouging done by companies that hold patents
over it. Not being able to afford the insulin leads to complications of
diabetics not being able to regulate sugar intake. These complications lead to
diabetic comas, diabetic shock, and trips to the hospital. Not taking care of a
body or being unable to regulate it effectively leads to larger complications
in the kidneys, increase in stroke, and increase in heart disease and obesity. All
of these things can become risk factors if a person has diabetes already, but
they can also be a cause of someone developing diabetes as well. This leads
into the talk about metabolism because the body is just as Ayurveda explains
that the body is connected, and it functions within each system separately and
together.
The two concepts of diabetes and Ayurveda are interestingly
connected because when we talk about the connections of the body, it moves
right into the uptake of glucose into our body which is what diabetes is not
doing. Having the ability to uptake glucose with the use of insulin is a huge
factor in living a healthy life especially because the majority of foods in society
today are high processed grains the produce a lot of glucose. Ayurveda teaches
that these connections happening all over the body especially the metabolism path
would show that it is out of line. This means that people with type 2 diabetes need
to correct how they are eating. This has been shown to really help people with
type 2 in which they can change diet and exercise putting the auto immune
disorder into a type of remission. These connections between an autoimmune
disorder and a natural remedy are intertwined, and I believe that most of our
modern medicine comes from a place of previous knowledge that was not fully
understood. Not only is diabetes manageable and treatable by these types of
natural practices but also it is one of the cheapest ways to treat the disease
compared to the thousands of dollars diabetics spend in hospitals each year. I think the most important part of Ayurveda is
that it focuses on treating the patient first then the disease, and doing it this
way makes a lot of sense compared to treating the disease the same each time
like Western medicine does. For example, we have seen cancer treatments that
work completely on one person, but on a person with the same cancer type it doesn’t
work at all. This clear cut shows that each and every body is created different.
I like to think of every person as an entirely different ecosystem, and in the
world of biology treating each ecosystem is approached differently.
In conclusion, diabetes and Ayurveda are intertwined creating
this relationship of focusing of the person and their disease, and treating it
with a lower cost. The connections of the body show us that each and every person
is made different, and it shows that just as Ayurveda has taught the natural
medicine users of the world is treat the person and the disease different with
each approach.
Sources
“American Diabetes Association | Research,
Education, Advocacy.” American Diabetes Association, www.diabetes.org.
Accessed 24 June 2022.
“Ayurveda.” Johns
Hopkins Medicine, 2 Dec. 2019,
www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/ayurveda.
“Ayurvedic Medicine: In
Depth.” NCCIH, www.nccih.nih.gov/health/ayurvedic-medicine-in-depth.
Accessed 24 June 2022.
“Diabetes - Symptoms and
Causes.” Mayo Clinic, 30 Oct. 2020,
www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/diabetes/symptoms-causes/syc-20371444.
“What Is Ayurveda?” WebMD,
13 Dec. 2016, www.webmd.com/balance/guide/ayurvedic-treatments.
“What Is Diabetes?” National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, 9 Dec. 2021,
www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/diabetes/overview/what-is-diabetes.
I thought it was really helpful how you went into the specifics of what each Ayurveda element is and the emphasis on each individual being a unique ecosystem is a really important idea. It is so vital that practitioners treat the individual first and the disease second because there are so many intersections.
ReplyDeleteI am glad you pointed out how as a society, we have become almost too reliant on modern medicine. Modern medicine is amazing, the fact that we can treat disease at a chemical level within the body is nothing short of incredible. I agree however that because of this, some doctors have started to focus less of the patient that contracted the disease and more on the disease itself. This becomes an issue when the persons lifestyle is causing or exacerbating the disease. It is like the old saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. I agree that by using some ayurvedic concepts we can improve the treatment we give to our patients. I also agree that there needs to be much more research done into certain ayurvedic practices before we apply them as replacements or even supplements to certain illnesses.
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