Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Elisabeth Hasselbeck


GlutenGalAZ

Recommended Posts

GlutenGalAZ Enthusiast

Open Original Shared Link

Didn't know if anyone wanted to see or hear any of the interviews coming up. The link above goes to the Gluten-Free Diet site and shows her next TV and Radio Appearances (also copied below).

Good Morning America - May 4th - ABC 7-9am

The View - May 4th - ABC 11am - 12pm EST

Here's Barbara (Barbara Walters Radio show) - Sirius/XM Radio - May 4th - Time Varies by Market

Hannity - May 4 - FOX News Channel 9-10pm EST

700 Club Health & Wellness Feature - Airdate TBD - Time Varies by Market

Rachael Ray show - airdate May 6th - Syndicated, check your local listtings

Larry King Live - May 6 - CNN 9-10pm EST

Fox & Friends - May 7 - FOX News Channel 6-9am EST

Huckabee - May 16 - FOX News Channel 8pm EST

Showbiz Tonight - May 6 - HLN

Below the TV/Radio Appearances it shows "Print Appearances"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Leiana Rookie
Open Original Shared Link

Didn't know if anyone wanted to see or hear any of the interviews coming up. The link above goes to the Gluten-Free Diet site and shows her next TV and Radio Appearances (also copied below).

Good Morning America - May 4th - ABC 7-9am

The View - May 4th - ABC 11am - 12pm EST

Here's Barbara (Barbara Walters Radio show) - Sirius/XM Radio - May 4th - Time Varies by Market

Hannity - May 4 - FOX News Channel 9-10pm EST

700 Club Health & Wellness Feature - Airdate TBD - Time Varies by Market

Rachael Ray show - airdate May 6th - Syndicated, check your local listtings

Larry King Live - May 6 - CNN 9-10pm EST

Fox & Friends - May 7 - FOX News Channel 6-9am EST

Huckabee - May 16 - FOX News Channel 8pm EST

Showbiz Tonight - May 6 - HLN

Below the TV/Radio Appearances it shows "Print Appearances"

yep heard about this tonight. she went undiagnosed for 10 years. Elizabeth was skelatel until she put herself on the diet and healed up. she looks great and healthy. i also heard some of these actresses are celiac but will not go on the diet so they can stay thin. what a shame. if only they knew what this is doing to them. such vanity. i rather be fat. honest...tired of being bone thin. :angry: :angry: :angry:

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Ms. Skinny Chic Explorer
yep heard about this tonight. she went undiagnosed for 10 years. Elizabeth was skelatel until she put herself on the diet and healed up. she looks great and healthy. i also heard some of these actresses are celiac but will not go on the diet so they can stay thin. what a shame. if only they knew what this is doing to them. such vanity. i rather be fat. honest...tired of being bone thin. :angry: :angry: :angry:

Elizabeth looks very good... no one chooses to be bone thin... everyone hasn't mastered the celiac diet.

Fat or skinny -- who cares..

It is about being happy in your own skin.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Lisa Mentor

I thought I would pass this information along:

Celiac Colleagues:

I am writing to call your attention to the current publicity surrounding the new book, The gluten-free Diet, A Gluten-Free Survival Guide by Elisabeth Hassselbeck, co-host of The View. While it is important to call attention to celiac disease, the information must be accurate

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GottaSki Mentor

Thanks for letting us know that she would be on Larry King...what a wonderful job she did shining a light on Celiac Disease.

Looks like those calls to Larry worked...did you catch the ? some say that Celiac is and auto immune disease, not an allergy.... way to go celiac.com ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Lisa Mentor

I also heard today that Al Roker mentioned that one of his daughters is trying the gluten free diet and is doing much better.

Don't know what that means, but it was good to hear.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Ms. Skinny Chic Explorer
I thought I would pass this information along:

Celiac Colleagues:

I am writing to call your attention to the current publicity surrounding the new book, The gluten-free Diet, A Gluten-Free Survival Guide by Elisabeth Hassselbeck, co-host of The View. While it is important to call attention to celiac disease, the information must be accurate

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



teemaree Apprentice

A friend in the US sent me the transcript of the Larry King interview...

I hope I am allowed to post it here?

I am thrilled she is bringing awareness of celiac...But I do hope that she makes it loud and clear

that it isn't a lifestyle choice. From what I read in this interview she really did seem to try her best to tell the importance and the sicknesses that come from being Celiac.

No matter what... she is making people take notice, and trying to educate people, and we need all the GOOD help we can get in getting the message out...

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

KING: Back with Elisabeth Hasselbeck. Her new book, "The gluten-free Diet." And it says: "A Gluten-Free Survival Guide."

Now, we think of gluten, we think of wheat, right?

HASSELBECK: Sure. Well, it's actually more than that. Gluten encompasses -- it's a protein found in barley, oats, wheat and rye. So it's more broad than most people actually think. So that is definitely a misconception out there.

And I -- I truly -- this has been a decade-long process for me. I have Celiac Disease. And I say out of diabetes came that low glycemic index diet and out of my Celiac Disease, I found this all star diet. I call it my diet in the rough because it is something that, even if I didn't have Celiac Disease, like many others, I would follow this diet.

KING: So you have to avoid what?

HASSELBECK: I actually don't even think of it as avoiding. But for me with Celiacs -- and many do with Celiac Disease -- we, our bodies, it's an autoimmune disease where if our bodies encounter gluten -- that protein found in barley, oats, wheat and rye -- we, our bodies pretty much shut down and fight themselves. What happens is if undiagnosed -- and one out of 133 million people have Celiac Disease. The scary thing, Larry, is that only 3 percent of them know it. Ninety-seven percent of the people with Celiac Disease are not aware of it because of misdiagnosis. They get diagnosed with something else, like I did.

You know, over 10 years ago, I was diagnosed with IBS, thyroid issues. I was having infertility problems. People suffer miscarriage after miscarriage, stillbirth. It eventually leads to intestinal cancer.

KING: All right...

HASSELBECK: So this is something that needs to be treated. But the diet is actually, yes, for people with Celiac Disease. For millions with food intolerance -- and that is up like 25 percent in the past five years. But for people who just want a healthy lifestyle. I mean I'm on this diet before I'm pregnant, during pregnancy and when I'm trying to get back in my bikini to, you know, strut around in the summer.

KING: What -- what happens when you're a kind of -- for want of a better word -- victim of it, at its worst...

HASSELBECK: If they're undiagnosed or do come across gluten and they are Celiacs, their bodies literally are so -- I mean I was in such pain. And doctors were ready to do surgery. They kept telling me I had IBS. I always say emphasis on the B.S. because that wasn't the answer.

It's the -- the equivalent of going into your physician and saying my head hurts and them telling you have a headache. Well, thanks for the information.

I was looking for a clear diagnosis. Thankfully, Dr. Peter Green was able to do that for me and run the proper tests. But it took me way too long to get that when it -- the saddest situation, I think, is when you have children who are encountering gluten when they have Celiac Disease and their bodies aren't growing.

Your intestines aren't able to absorb any nutrients. So you are then predisposed to all of this, you know, intestinal cancer, etc.

KING: Is it...

HASSELBECK: But they're in such pain and deprived of nutrients and they don't grow.

KING: You call it an allergy, but some say it's an autoimmune disease.

HASSELBECK: It is an autoimmune disease. It is absolutely a disease...

KING: It is? HASSELBECK: And it needs to -- we need to get that diagnosis percentage up drastically, because this is actually -- it's so preventative. I mean you have people who aren't celiacs on this diet because it improves everything from ADHD to ADD, depression, energy levels, metabolism.

This is a phenomenal way to eat. I was so thankful to find it.

But when people do encounter gluten who are celiacs, with it leading to diabetes, thyroid disease, intestinal cancer, it ends up costing their body so much more, but also our medical system so much more down the road.

It's a preventative diet. It works incredibly well. I have never felt better in my life. And certainly when I proposed the book, it wasn't the one that people thought I would write, but it is one that comes -- literally comes from the gut and the heart. And I interweave throughout the book easy tips.

KING: Can we test children as to whether they have it?

HASSELBECK: Absolutely. And if you -- if your children are exhibiting symptoms such as either listlessness or irritability, if they have a bloated belly, if they say my -- my tummy hurts, it's most diagnosed in that first year, when parents are introducing food and you're -- you're still vigilant about everything they put in their bodies.

It's in the years thereafter, that two to, you know, the teenage years where you're not really sure what's going on.

If they're not meeting their growth benchmarks, demand a celiac test from your doctors. And if they have it, if your child has it, or a sibling, your chances of having Celiac Disease is one in 22. So you should get tested, as well.

KING: Is it...

HASSELBECK: It's something that, really, we need to improve upon.

KING: Is it inherited?

HASSELBECK: It is inherited. It's a genetic disease. You can get tested both for the gene. You can have an endoscopy. I have the gene. You know, I will have my family tested and my kids tested down the road. It's great information to have.

We are in a new era of preventative testing, so you know what your gene code says, but also preventative eating. I mean I don't think of it as replacing anything and I -- I interview people throughout the book and give social tips. But I -- there are so many that are on it who don't have celiac, like I said, that do it just because of the health benefits alone.

So it's not about removing, it's about replacing with something much more powerful.

KING: One cannot deny an important, important book.

Thanks, Elisabeth.

HASSELBECK: Thank you, Larry.

KING: See you soon.

HASSELBECK: OK.

KING: Elisabeth Hasselbeck, co-host of "The View" and author of "The gluten-free Diet: A Gluten-Free Survival Guide," with a forward by Dr. Peter Green.

HASSELBECK: Thank you.

KING: Thank you, dear.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
MaryJones2 Enthusiast

That sounds about like The View segment. I noticed a few inaccuracies in her comments and thought she oversimplified celiac disease a little too much. I haven't read the book so I don't know how much of that is just cutting it up for a television audience and how much of it is the real message delivered in the book.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
abbysmom Rookie

I have watched all the shows that she was a guest on this week. I thought she made it clear that she HAD to be on this "diet" because of Celiac, but that it is a very helpful way to eat for others. I did not think she down played it in the book either and she was very clear that getting an accurate, official diagnosis is the ideal. I think she wrote the book to help not only newly diagnosed people, but those who just want a healthier way of living. As for referring to it as an allergy, the book lets you know it is an auto-immune disease. I enjoyed the book, and enjoy her bringing Celiac to shows that otherwise wouldn't have ever talked about it!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      120,987
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    happydays
    Newest Member
    happydays
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • TessaBaker
      It sounds like you're dealing with a complex situation, and I can understand how frustrating it must be not to have a clear answer. Gut health can indeed play a significant role in various aspects of our well-being, including hair health.
    • Celiac16
      I have found similar benefits from thiamine. I was diagnosed with celiac at 16 and never really recovered despite strict gluten and dairy free diet and no detectable antibodies on checkup bloodworks. I’ve tried stopping the b1 but start to feel bad again- I wanted my doctors to do more extensive testing for the different thiamine transporters and enzymes which would be a better indication if I was deficient or dependent on it but everyone dismisses it (there are know genetic mutations where you need to take it daily for life). I have looked into Thiamine Responsive Megablast Anemia and I have a lot of the more mild symptoms of the disease that manifest when thiamine isn’t given to the patient such as optic neuritis… I just find the parallels interesting. i think that celiacs could be a side issue of inflammation that resulted from vitamin deficiencies. I was eating a lot of sugar leading up to my diagnosis and since eating gluten free didn’t make me feel much better, I’m wondering if this was more the underlying issue (sugar heavily depletes b1). I usually take 1.5g thiamine a day.
    • Fluka66
      Thank you for your welcome and reply.  Yes I've been carefully reading labels looking for everything in bold and have been amazed by what I have seen. However Heinz tomato and basil soup is wheat free so I m thinking I already have ulcers?  The acid could be causing the pain . My pain always starts in one place then follows the same route through me . GP confirmed that is the route of our digestive system.  So much pain from stabbing to tearing. If I throw in milk with lactose it's horrific.  Many years of it now, won't go into details but been seeing a consultant for a supposedly different problem . Wondering what damage has been done over the years. Many thanks for your reply. Wishing you the very best.    
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum community, @Fluka66! Did you realize that the vast majority of all canned soups use wheat starch as a thickener, including such common commodities as Campbell's tomato soup?
    • Fluka66
      Hello. Any help would really steady my nerves right now. I realised recently that certain food left me in agonising pain so eliminated from my diet. I also have a swollen lymph node. My very caring Dr did some blood tests and I went back the other day to see another equally caring Dr . She looked at the test results one result has come back with something wrong. It came very fast so I'm afraid I didn't catch what it was. Anyway the urgent referral to ENT. She did say as I had already eliminated gluten it wouldn't say anything on the results and neither Drs nor I were prepared to reintroduce gluten . I've just had some tomato soup and again in agony only thinking this must have aggravated maybe existing problems. Does anyone know what I'm facing now ? My swollen lymph node , pain when eating gluten and lactose and I'm assuming the acidity of tomatoes triggering pain.  I'm trying to stay calm and to be honest I've been in intolerable pain at times rendering me unable to stand up straight but I've always just got on with it . Guess I'm reaching out and would really appreciate any wise or unwise words at this stage. Wishing you all the very best as you live with this illness. Fluka66  
×
×
  • Create New...