Diabetes Prevention
"Pre-diabetes has no symptoms. Most people only find out they have it when they are already diabetic. A single fasting blood test — interpreted with your metabolic profile — tells you everything. This is what the Teledoc programme starts with."
Stop diabetes before it begins.
136 million Indians are pre-diabetic right now — and most don’t know it. Teledoc identifies your metabolic risk phenotype early and builds a doctor-supervised plan to reverse course before blood sugar becomes a lifelong condition.
Diabetes doesn’t appear overnight. It builds for years — silently.
These are the most common risk factors in the Indian population. If you identify with two or more, you are likely already in the pre-diabetic spectrum.
| Risk factor | Why it matters | Risk level |
|---|---|---|
Family history of diabetes Parent or sibling with T2DM |
Having a first-degree relative with T2DM raises lifetime risk by 40–70%. South Asians carry a stronger genetic predisposition than any other ethnic group. | HIGH RISK |
Overweight / central obesity Abdominal fat accumulation |
Excess visceral fat directly causes insulin resistance. Indians develop dangerous visceral fat at BMI levels considered "normal" in Western populations — the "thin fat" phenotype. | HIGH RISK |
PCOS / PCOD Most common in Indian women |
Over 70% of women with PCOS have insulin resistance. Hormonal imbalance and metabolic dysfunction are deeply intertwined — PCOS is one of the strongest pre-diabetes predictors in Indian women. | HIGH RISK |
Chronic stress Cortisol-driven hyperglycaemia |
Cortisol raises hepatic glucose output and promotes central fat deposition. High-pressure urban lifestyles make this one of the most underdiagnosed metabolic risk factors in India. | MOD–HIGH |
Thyroid dysfunction Hypothyroidism and metabolic link |
Hypothyroidism impairs glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity. Many patients with underactive thyroid gain weight easily and develop metabolic syndrome without recognising the thyroid connection. | MODERATE |
Sedentary lifestyle No regular physical activity |
Physical inactivity is one of the most modifiable risk factors. Muscle is the body's primary glucose disposal organ — without regular use, insulin resistance worsens steadily over time. | MODERATE |
Poor sleep Less than 6 hours per night |
Less than 6 hours of sleep per night raises insulin resistance, elevates cortisol, and dysregulates appetite hormones — increasing both caloric intake and glucose mismanagement. | MODERATE |
High-refined-carb diet White rice, maida, sugar, juice |
The typical Indian vegetarian diet produces repeated glucose spikes that chronically stress pancreatic beta cells and accelerate insulin resistance over years. | CUMULATIVE |
Borderline lab values Fasting glucose 100–125 or HbA1c 5.7–6.4% |
These numbers are the early signals most standard care ignores. Fasting glucose 100–125 mg/dL or HbA1c 5.7–6.4% is the ideal intervention window — act now. | ACT NOW |
The window between healthy and diabetic is longer than you think — and fully reversible.
Pre-diabetes is not a mild condition — it is the early stage of the same disease process that leads to Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, fatty liver, and kidney damage. The difference is that at this stage, the trajectory is almost entirely reversible with the right intervention.
Most pre-diabetic patients are told to “watch their diet and exercise more.” Without a specific, phenotype-matched plan, this generic advice fails in over 80% of cases within two years.
The Teledoc programme identifies why your metabolism is struggling — and builds a targeted plan around that specific driver, not a generic one-size protocol.
💡 Studies show that intensive lifestyle intervention — the kind we provide — reduces progression from pre-diabetes to Type 2 diabetes by up to 58% compared to standard care. The earlier the intervention, the better the outcome.
The blood sugar spectrum — where do you sit?
| Stage | Fasting glucose | HbA1c | What it means |
|---|---|---|---|
Normal |
Below 100 mg/dL | Below 5.7% | Insulin responds normally. Maintain with healthy lifestyle. |
|
Pre-diabetes
← Intervene here
|
100–125 mg/dL | 5.7–6.4% | Insulin resistance developing. Fully reversible with targeted intervention. This is the ideal entry point for Teledoc Weight Loss Programe. |
Type 2 Diabetes |
126+ mg/dL | 6.5%+ | Beta-cell function declining. Manageable but not easily reversed. Lifelong monitoring required. |
We find your metabolic risk phenotype first. Then we treat it.
Generic lifestyle advice fails because different people develop pre-diabetes for different reasons. Teledoc’s metabolonomics framework identifies your specific driver — so the treatment is built for you, not for the average patient.Whether you’ve been living with symptoms for a while or you’ve just started noticing muscle or bone pain, we can help pinpoint what’s ailing you:
The six metabolic risk phenotypes
| Phenotype | How it drives pre-diabetes | Clinical warning | Prevention direction |
|---|---|---|---|
01 Insulin resistance |
Cells stop responding to insulin. Pancreas overproduces, driving weight gain, fatigue, and cravings. Most common pre-diabetes driver in Indians. | Often missed — fasting glucose looks "borderline normal" but fasting insulin is already elevated | GLP-1 + low-GI diet + resistance training |
02 Cortisol excess |
Chronic stress keeps cortisol elevated, pushing the liver to release glucose continuously — even without eating, especially in the morning. | Dietary changes alone won't work — the stress axis must be addressed first | Stress reduction + cortisol diet + adaptogens |
03 Thyroid dysfunction |
Hypothyroidism slows the metabolic engine — impairing glucose uptake and promoting fat storage. Standard prevention fails without thyroid optimisation first. | Treating glucose without treating the thyroid is like mopping the floor with the tap still running | Thyroid optimisation + metabolic support |
04 Hormonal dysregulation |
In women with PCOS, androgen excess and insulin resistance create a vicious cycle. In men, low testosterone accelerates metabolic deterioration. | PCOS without metabolic treatment nearly always progresses to pre-diabetes within 10 years | Hormonal metabolic protocol + anti-androgenic diet |
05 Neurogenic appetite |
Dysregulated hunger hormones drive compulsive overeating independent of actual caloric need. A neurological pattern that willpower cannot override. | GLP-1 therapy is the most effective intervention — it targets the neurological mechanism directly | GLP-1 appetite regulation + behavioural coaching |
06 Gut / microbiome imbalance |
Dysbiotic microbiome drives systemic inflammation and endotoxaemia that directly impairs insulin sensitivity — a rising issue in urban India with antibiotic overuse. | Antibiotic overuse, low-fibre diet, and chronic stress all deplete protective gut bacteria | Gut-targeted diet + pre/probiotics + low inflammation |
Your prevention journey — step by step
A structured, doctor-supervised programme — not a pamphlet of generic advice.
| Phase | What happens | Deliverables |
|---|---|---|
WEEK 1–2 Metabolic risk assessment |
Online doctor consultation. Blood panel ordered via partner lab. Symptom and dietary intake assessed. Metabolic risk phenotype determined. | Video consult + lab tests + phenotype risk report |
WEEK 3–4 Personalised prevention plan |
Indian vegetarian diet chart issued. Exercise and walking plan started. Nutraceutical stack initiated. GLP-1 considered based on phenotype and baseline labs. | Diet chart + exercise plan + nutraceutical prescription |
WEEK 5–12 Guided lifestyle change |
Weekly WhatsApp check-ins. Meal plan refinement based on adherence and response. Sleep and stress coaching. Behavioural support built in. | Weekly check-ins + plan adjustments + behaviour coaching |
MONTH 3–6 Outcome review + long-term plan |
Repeat blood panel. HbA1c and fasting insulin reviewed. Resistance training added. Maintenance roadmap issued. GLP-1 titration if on therapy. | Lab review + strength training + maintenance plan |
Your prevention journey — step by step
No supplements you can’t find. No foods you can’t pronounce. Every plan is built around Indian grocery staples — matched to your phenotype.
The single biggest dietary challenge in Indian pre-diabetes prevention is glycaemic load. The typical Indian vegetarian diet is high in refined carbohydrates and low in protein and fibre — precisely the combination that drives insulin resistance. We restructure the diet around three principles: lower glycaemic index, higher protein, and increased dietary fibre.
Best vegetarian protein sources for blood sugar control
Soya chunks / soya granules — 52g protein per 100g, very low GI
Moong dal (sprouted or cooked) — high protein, high fibre, low GI
Low-fat paneer — protein without excess saturated fat
Hung curd / Greek-style dahi — protein + gut health benefit
Tofu — phytoestrogens + complete protein (PCOS-friendly)
Rajma, chana, masoor dal — slow-release carbs + soluble fibre
Roasted makhana — low GI snack, high magnesium
Sample day: Insulin resistance phenotype
Low glycaemic index · high protein · high soluble fibre
| Meal | What to eat |
|---|---|
| Early morning | Methi seeds water + 8 soaked almonds + 2 walnuts |
| Breakfast | Moong dal chilla (2) + hung curd (1 bowl) + green chutney |
| Mid-morning | Buttermilk (chaas) + 1 low-GI fruit (guava, pear, or apple) |
| Lunch | Rajma or chana curry + 1 multigrain roti + sabzi + salad |
| Evening | Roasted makhana (1 bowl) + green tea (no sugar) |
| Dinner | Dal (1 bowl) + stir-fried sabzi + 1 roti + cucumber raita |
Sample day: Cortisol / stress phenotype
Anti-inflammatory · magnesium-rich · no caffeine or stimulants
| Meal | What to eat |
|---|---|
| Early morning | Warm water + ashwagandha (if prescribed) + 1 banana |
| Breakfast | Oats daliya with nuts and seeds + turmeric milk (no sugar) |
| Mid-morning | Coconut water + handful of walnuts |
| Lunch | Khichdi (rice + dal) + dahi (1 bowl) + ghee (1 tsp) + sabzi |
| Evening | Chamomile tea + 2 dates + pumpkin seeds |
| Dinner | Palak paneer (low fat) + 1 roti + cucumber raita |
Sample day: PCOS / hormonal phenotype
Anti-androgenic · low dairy · zinc and chromium-rich
| Meal | What to eat |
|---|---|
| Early morning | Spearmint tea + soaked flaxseeds (1 tsp) |
| Breakfast | Tofu bhurji or besan chilla + green chutney |
| Mid-morning | Mixed seeds (pumpkin, sunflower, flax) + berries or amla |
| Lunch | Soya chunks curry + brown rice (small portion) + salad |
| Evening | Herbal tea + roasted chana (1 small bowl) |
| Dinner | Moong dal soup + 1 roti + stir-fried sabzi |
Sample day: Thyroid phenotype
Selenium and iodine adequate · cooked vegetables only · limit raw goitrogens
| Meal | What to eat |
|---|---|
| Early morning | 2 Brazil nuts + warm water with lemon |
| Breakfast | Idli (2–3) + sambar + coconut chutney |
| Mid-morning | Low-fat lassi + 1 seasonal fruit |
| Lunch | Dal tadka + cooked spinach + rice (small portion) + salad |
| Evening | Roasted seeds mix + green tea |
| Dinner | Low-fat paneer + 2 roti + cooked vegetable sabzi |
Foods that raise pre-diabetes risk — reduce these
| Reduce or avoid | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| White rice in large portions (especially at dinner) | High GI — produces rapid glucose spike, then crash; promotes insulin resistance over time |
| Maida-based foods (bread, biscuits, naan, khari) | Refined flour digests rapidly, produces extreme glucose spikes with no fibre buffer |
| Sugary beverages (packaged juice, sweetened chai, cold drinks) | Liquid sugar with no fibre — fastest route to insulin resistance; worse than solid sugar |
| Processed snacks (namkeen, wafers, instant noodles) | High refined carb + trans fat combination depletes chromium and magnesium — key insulin cofactors |
| Fried foods frequently (puri, bhatura, samosa, pakoda) | Trans fats from repeated frying impair cell membrane insulin receptor function |
| Fruit juices (even fresh) | High fructose load without the fibre — drives hepatic fat accumulation and raises triglycerides |
The four lifestyle pillars of diabetes prevention
Diet alone reverses pre-diabetes in fewer than 30% of cases. The programme addresses all four proven levers simultaneously.
1. Resistance training
Skeletal muscle is the body’s largest glucose disposal organ. Building muscle through resistance training dramatically improves insulin sensitivity — often more effectively than cardio alone.
2–3 sessions per week of bodyweight or light weights
Compound movements: squats, lunges, push-ups, rows
Post-meal walks (10–15 min) blunt glucose spikes by up to 30%
Personalised plan provided — home-friendly, no gym required
2. Sleep optimisation
Even one week of poor sleep is enough to produce insulin resistance equivalent to gaining 10 kg of body fat. Sleep is a metabolic intervention — not a lifestyle luxury.
Target 7–8 hours of consistent sleep per night
Screen cutoff 1 hour before bed reduces cortisol spikes
Late dinner raises fasting glucose — eat by 8 pm as a rule
Sleep coaching included in Metabolic Plus and Total Transformation plans.
3. Stress and cortisol management
Cortisol directly raises blood glucose. Chronic stress can push a borderline pre-diabetic into the diabetic range — independent of diet or exercise habits.
10-minute structured breathing or meditation daily.
Adaptogen support(ashwagandha, holy basil) where clinically indicated.
Morning cortisol test included in phenotyping panel.
Behaviour coaching in Metabolic Plus and Total Transformation plans.
4. Targeted nutraceuticals
Certain micronutrients and plant compounds have strong evidence for improving insulin sensitivity and reducing diabetes risk — specifically when matched to the patient’s phenotype.
| Nutraceutical | Mechanism | Best for phenotype |
|---|---|---|
| Berberine | Insulin sensitiser — evidence comparable to Metformin; activates AMPK pathway | Insulin resistance, gut dysbiosis |
| Chromium picolinate | Improves glucose uptake in muscle cells; reduces carbohydrate cravings | Insulin resistance, neurogenic appetite |
| Magnesium glycinate | Essential cofactor for insulin receptor function; 70% of Indians are deficient | All phenotypes, especially stress |
| Inositol (Myo + D-Chiro) | Improves ovarian function and insulin signalling | PCOS / hormonal dysregulation |
| Vitamin D3 + K2 | Low vitamin D strongly associated with insulin resistance and pre-diabetes | All phenotypes |
| Ashwagandha (KSM-66) | Reduces cortisol, improves thyroid function, reduces fasting glucose | Cortisol excess, thyroid phenotype |
What success looks like — measurable outcomes by Month 3
Progress is tracked through lab values — not just how you feel.
| Outcome marker | What to expect | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| HbA1c reduction | 0.3–0.8% reduction in pre-diabetics on the full programme | 12 weeks |
| Fasting glucose | Most pre-diabetic patients reach below 100 mg/dL in responders | 6–10 weeks |
| Weight reduction | 5–8 kg average in the first 3 months; visceral fat targeted | 4–8 weeks visible |
| Fasting insulin + HOMA-IR | Insulin resistance index measurably improved | 10–12 weeks |
| Waist circumference | Central adiposity reduction — the most meaningful fat loss for metabolic risk | 6–8 weeks |
| Energy and fatigue | Most patients report significant improvement in sustained energy | 4–6 weeks |
| Lipid profile | LDL and triglyceride reduction; HDL improvement | 12 weeks |
| Diabetes progression risk | 58% reduction vs. standard care with intensive lifestyle intervention | 6 months |
Frequently asked questions
I don’t have diabetes. Do I need this programme?
If you have any of the risk factors listed above — family history, PCOS, borderline labs, abdominal weight gain, chronic stress — you likely already have some degree of insulin resistance. The pre-diabetic phase can last 10–15 years before the diabetes diagnosis. This is the window to intervene. Prevention is dramatically cheaper, easier, and more effective than treatment.
My doctor said my blood sugar is ‘normal’ — why would I need this?
Standard fasting glucose tests often miss early metabolic dysfunction. Fasting insulin and HOMA-IR — which measure insulin resistance before blood sugar rises — are rarely ordered in routine check-ups. A patient can have severe insulin resistance and completely “normal” fasting glucose for years before the numbers change. We test what matters.
Is this suitable for someone with a family history of diabetes?
Yes — family history is one of the primary indications for this programme. Having a first-degree relative with Type 2 diabetes raises lifetime risk by 40–70%. Early phenotyping can identify subclinical insulin resistance and allow intervention before irreversible beta-cell damage occurs.
Can this programme help with weight loss as well?
Yes. Weight loss — specifically visceral fat reduction — is a primary mechanism of diabetes prevention. The programme produces clinically meaningful weight loss through phenotype-matched dietary restructuring, resistance training, and GLP-1 therapy where indicated. The goal is metabolic correction, which weight loss facilitates.
Will I need GLP-1 injections for prevention?
Not necessarily. GLP-1 therapy is considered at the Week 10 decision gate, based on phenotype, degree of insulin resistance, and response to lifestyle changes. Most prevention-stage patients with mild risk achieve sufficient improvement through diet, exercise, and nutraceuticals. GLP-1 is prescribed only where the clinical case supports it.
I am a strict vegetarian. Will the diet actually work?
Teledoc Weight Loss Programe was specifically designed for Indian vegetarian patients. Every meal plan uses familiar Indian ingredients — soya, paneer, dahi, dal, sabzi — structured around glycaemic index, protein adequacy, and fibre targets. Protein supplementation is provided where dietary protein targets cannot be met through food alone.
How long before I see results?
Most patients see measurable improvement in fasting glucose and energy levels within 4–6 weeks. HbA1c and fasting insulin take 10–12 weeks to show significant change. Weight and waist circumference typically respond within 6–8 weeks. Lab values are reviewed at Month 3 to confirm the direction of change.
Are consultations online? Do I need to travel anywhere?
All consultations are conducted online via secure video call, compliant with the Telemedicine Practice Guidelines 2020 (MoHFW, India). Lab tests are done at your nearest partner lab — home collection available in most cities. No clinic visit required.
The best time to prevent diabetes was 10 years ago. The second best time is today.
Identify your risk phenotype. Get a plan built for you. Start in minutes.
