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Diabetes Care, Vol 19, Issue 11 1294-1301, Copyright © 1996 by American Diabetes Association
Fat replacers: their use in foods and role in diabetes medical nutrition therapy
H Warshaw, M Franz, MA Powers and M Wheeler
Hope Warshaw Associates, Alexandria, Virginia 22308, USA.
The scientific literature demonstrates that fat replacers have a reasonable
certainty of no harm. Whether they help produce desired health outcomes,
i.e., decreased risk of coronary heart disease and certain types of cancer
related to excess fat intake, weight reduction, changes in lipid profile,
improved glycemic control, etc., depends on how individuals use these foods
to change food choices and eating behaviors. As Miller and Rolls conclude,
...the use of fat-replaced foods alone should not be expected to produce
spontaneous improvements in weight management. Such improvements will still
be dependent on long-term behavioral changes that include not only
modifications in fat, but also modifications in overall energy intake and
increase in energy expenditure. (53) Though it has not been studied, one
may conjecture that encouraging people with diabetes to use foods with fat
replacers to achieve nutrition management goals requires sufficient
education, continuous counseling, and an individual's conscientious
commitment and readiness to change food habits.

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Copyright © 1996 by the American Diabetes Association.
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