Listen Live
St Jude banner

For Jackson, putting a treadmill in the bedroom helped him get the much-needed exercise he wasn’t getting after a day in the studio sitting at a mixing board. “That’s all I do while I’m talking on the phone, watching TV, reading the newspaper,” he says. “And I play tennis three times a week. That’s the thing; you’ve got to find something that works for you that you can do every single day.”

With food, he had to totally reprogram his diet, cutting back on foods rich in fat and sugar and learning to snack healthier. When he goes to the studio or shows up on the set of American Idol, he’s usually got a crisp apple or a low-carb snack bar in his pocket.

Lately he’s been swapping highly processed foods for more natural items. “It wears better on me,” Jackson says.

Diabetes came as a shock

His ordeal with type 2 diabetes began six years ago with flu-like symptoms. “I started taking over-the-counter cold meds,” he says. “I was thirsty all the time. I felt like I was running a temperature. I was tired. It was a very weird kind of feeling.”

Jackson, who didn’t enjoy doctor’s visits, finally made an appointment. His blood sugar exceeded 500 (normal is between 80 and 120). “I had type 2 diabetes—huge wake-up call.”

Jackson’s father was diabetic, but he never thought it would happen to him. “I was predisposed,” he admits. “I ate good food that was bad for me and had a family history of it.”

Now he’s our trying to get others to recognize the symptoms and inspire them to manage the disease by making good food choices and getting more exercise. “Consider that a third of the people walking around with [diabetes] don’t realize they have it,” he explains. “Most of the people who die with diabetes die from cardiovascular disease. I want to make people more aware of the disease.”

“[With diabetes] you’re never going to be out of harm’s way,” Jackson says. “It’s a struggle every day. You can’t run away from diabetes. That’s one of the things that people have to face.”

American Idol’s Randy Jackson On Diabetes  was originally published on blackdoctor.org

« Previous page 1 2