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Can you prevent diabetes if it runs in the family?

Can you prevent diabetes if it runs in the family?
With a family history, your risk is real, but far from inevitable.

Diabetes prevention: If diabetes runs in your family but your blood sugars are currently normal, you’re in a powerful prevention window. Genetics load the gun; lifestyle and timely screening decide whether it fires. This guide explains what “normal” really means, how often to test, and the few habits that, when consistently applied, have the greatest impact.

First: what counts as “normal” sugar?

Clinically, normal glycaemia means:

These thresholds are from the ADA’s current Standards of Care.

How often should you test for diabetes if it is in the family?

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The prevention playbook (what actually works)

1. Lose ~7% of current body weight (and keep it off)

The landmark Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) showed a 58% reduction in diabetes risk with lifestyle change targeting =7% weight loss; metformin reduced risk by 31%, but lifestyle outperformed medication. Example: if you’re 78 kg, aim to lose about 5–6 kg over 6 months.

2. Move with intent, every week

Match the DPP (Diabetes Prevention Program) / (American Diabetes Association) ADA target: =150 minutes/week of moderate activity (e.g., brisk walking) plus 2–3 days/week of resistance training; avoid >2 consecutive inactive days. These patterns improve insulin sensitivity even before weight changes.

3. Eat for steady glucose, not perfection

You don’t need a rigid diet. Two evidence-based patterns:

4. Sleep, stress, and routines matter

The ADA emphasises behavioural supports, sleep regularity, stress management, problem-solving, and social support because they make weight and activity goals stick. Target 7–9 hours of consistent sleep; treat loud snoring/daytime sleepiness (possible OSA) since it worsens insulin resistance.

5. Know when medication enters the chat

You don’t need a pill if your sugars are normal. If future tests show prediabetes, your doctor may consider metformin in higher-risk individuals (younger than 60, BMI =35 kg/m², or women with prior gestational diabetes)—in addition to lifestyle measures.

A simple, doctor-approved 90-day plan

Weeks 1–2: Foundations

Weeks 3–6: Build

Weeks 7–12: Consolidate

When to retest and what to track

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With a family history, your risk is real, but far from inevitable. Prioritise a 7% weight-loss target, 150 minutes/week of activity plus strength training, and a high-fibre, minimally processed plate. Screen on time (earlier if South Asian BMI =23), and reserve metformin only if you cross into prediabetes and meet high-risk criteria. These few moves, done consistently, are the difference between “at risk” and “doing well for decades.”

Medical disclaimer: This article is for general education and does not replace a personal consultation. Screening schedules, activity targets, and medications must be individualised by your doctor.

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