Spa Programs in the News
Mastering the Science and Art of
Type 2 Diabetes - Lifestyle and diabetes experts team up to debut model
for preeminent care
LUDLOW, VT: A diabetes-care marriage made in heaven. That's
one way to describe the forthcoming program between Green Mountain at
Fox Run, Vermont's healthy lifestyle retreat for women, and select faculty
from the world-renowned Joslin Diabetes Center, affiliated with Harvard
Medical School, in Boston.
Brothers Alan Wayler, PhD, executive director of Green
Mountain at Fox Run, and Barry Wayler, MD, an endocrinologist practicing
in the field of clinical diabetes, are running a week-long program November
7-13, 2004 at Green Mountain to introduce women with type 2 diabetes
to a highly integrated lifestyle and mind/body approach to mastering
the disease. Select faculty from Joslin Diabetes Center will present
a number of the workshops. The experience has been named "Living
Well." Here at last, the art of living meets the science of self-health
care.
The Living Well program (open just to women), will include:
workshops on how to eat mindfully, manage emotional eating, and beat
diabetes burnout; fitness walking, strength training, dance, aquatics,
and other feel-good activities; planning for success at home; discussions
of body image, assertiveness, and relationships; nutrition and cooking
classes; guided imagery, meditation, and yoga.
To Green Mountain participant Gina Roperti, a 39-year-old
woman with type 2 diabetes, the teaming up makes perfect sense. When
Gina was first diagnosed with diabetes, she was prescribed medication,
had her feet checked, saw a nutritionist, and was told to exercise.
"But when your knees hurt, exercise doesn't come easy," she
says. She knew she needed a radical change in lifestyle, "but not
a radical approach. It had to be something I really would do,"
says Gina, who lives in Plymouth, MI.
She signed up for a stay at Green Mountain at Fox Run, the 30-year-old
professionally-directed center that pioneered the non-diet approach
to achieving a healthy weight. Here, like-minded women eat, sleep, talk,
get active together, and change bad habits to good.
Take a residential experience like this, add the expertise
of Joslin diabetes educators, and diabetes care just moved a major step
forward. "For the first time, diabetes experts are joining healthy
weight/ lifestyle experts to help empower women to take charge of their
health and improve their quality of life, not just teach them how to
manage their illness," says John Zrebiec, MSW, CDE, associate director
of the behavioral and mental health unit at Joslin. "To someone
with diabetes, controlling your blood sugar isn't enough unless you
also gain a sense of well-being. Emotional balance, improved self-esteem,
joy in moving your body-those are tangible and encouraging benefits,"
says Zrebiec.
"Changes can't be made in isolation. Food and emotions
are linked-that's a reality," adds Ann Goebel-Fabbri, PhD, psychologist
and director of Joslin's eating disorders program. "Women with
type 2 diabetes usually have a long history of dieting and struggling
with their weight. Doctors can't expect people to just snap out of it
and get their lives together because now they have diabetes. If they
could have sorted it out on their own before, they would have,"
says Dr. Goebel-Fabbri.
The Living Well program was the brainchild of Dr. Barry
Wayler, who recognized that although comprehensive diabetes education
has come a long way in recent years, patients need more guidance and
support to put that knowledge into action. "A key element of this
program is that women will be immersed together in a non-clinical setting
for an entire week of 'life situation learning'," says Dr. Barry
Wayler. "Such an effective setting for lifestyle change is what
practitioners and patients have been looking for."
Dr. Alan Wayler agrees. "Most education is passive. The supportive,
hands-on environment at Green Mountain allows a woman to take the most
critical step in creating successful change: Living the experience,
actively working on all aspects of lifestyle change at the same time,
as she would at home," he says.
Today, Gina Roperti says that, with her doctor and Green
Mountain at Fox Run's support, taking charge of her diabetes-and her
happiness-is no longer the, well, insurmountable mountain she once saw
it as. Referring to the Joslin-Green Mountain initiative, she says,
"Now I can get the best of both worlds in one place. I'm still
climbing, but I'm here. I'm doing it. Life has never been better."
To register for the Living Well workshop, interested participants may
call Green Mountain at Fox Run at (800) 448-8106 (outside the U.S.,
call (802) 228-8885) or visit www.greenmountainatfoxrun.com
For interviews, please contact Alan H. Wayler, PhD at
(802) 228-8885 or alan@greenmountainatfoxrun.com.
About Green Mountain at Fox Run
Green Mountain at Fox Run healthy lifestyle center, in Ludlow, VT, has
helped thousands of women to get fit, healthy, and happy-and permanently
achieve healthy weights without dieting by developing real, lasting
solutions. achieve healthy weights and begin to The year 2004 marks
its 32nd year helping women achieve health weights and lifestyles. For
more information, call (800) 448-8106 or visit www.greenmountainatfoxrun.com
About Joslin Diabetes Center
Established in 1898, Joslin Diabetes Center is an internationally recognized
diabetes and endocrine treatment, research, and patient and professional
education institution affiliated with Harvard Medical School and headquartered
in Boston, MA. Joslin is a non-profit organization dedicated to finding
a cure for diabetes and improving the lives of people with diabetes.
For more information, call (800) JOSLIN-1 or visit www.joslin.org