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Nepal Study: Traditional Diets Fight Type-2 Diabetes
8 Feb
Summary
- Study to test traditional diets for diabetes prevention and reversal in Nepal.
- Low-cost, community-led dietary changes aim to combat diabetes epidemic.
- Project runs from 2026-2030, funded by a £1.78 million grant.

A new study led by the University of Glasgow, in collaboration with Dhulikhel Hospital in Nepal, will explore whether a return to traditional diets can prevent and reverse type-2 diabetes. The CoDIAPREM project, funded by a £1.78 million grant, will run from 2026 to 2030.
Researchers aim to evaluate if community-led adoption of traditional food patterns, excluding processed items, can lead to modest weight loss and combat the surging rates of type-2 diabetes. This initiative is particularly crucial for South Asia, where modern processed foods have contributed to a diabetes epidemic.
The study is designed as a community-based program, emphasizing scalability in low-resource settings. It will assess the potential for traditional diets to prevent diabetes onset and induce remission without medication, building on previous promising pilot studies.




