For diabetics, they cannot eat enough rice, they cannot eat too much fruit, and they basically do not touch desserts. Faced with this, how should diabetes be treated? Is it good to have gastric diversion surgery? Gastric diversion: Gastric diversion surgery was first used in bariatric surgery. Westerners have been consuming high fat and high calories for a long time, and their weight has been rising, and many people accept this kind of bariatric surgery in order to pursue beauty and make themselves healthy again. After several years of clinical practice, doctors accidentally found that this kind of surgery can effectively treat diabetes, thus gastric diversion surgery, which brings a new gospel for diabetic patients. One comprehensive analysis of 22,094 patients showed that 84% of type 2 diabetes was completely reversed after the procedure, and most patients stopped taking oral medication or insulin therapy before being discharged from the hospital. Francesco Lupino of the Catholic University of Rome, Italy, reported similar results in Mexico, Peru, the Dominican Republic and India in diabetic patients who did not reach morbid obesity after gastric diversion surgery. Some other countries, such as China, Japan, Italy and Belgium, have also done some clinical trials. In the United States, in January 2009 the American Diabetes Association (ADA), the world authority on diabetes treatment, officially included gastric diversion surgery (GBP) in the Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Diabetes, identifying it as a routine treatment for diabetes. The 44th European Diabetes Association (October 2008, Rome, Italy) concluded that type 2 diabetes is expected to be a surgically curable gastrointestinal disease. In Europe, the 45th Annual Meeting of the European Diabetes Research Society on September 29, 2009 confirmed that diabetes has become a surgically curable gastrointestinal disease. Gastric diversion surgery is a one-time treatment and clinical cure for diabetes because it is unique in that it changes the physiological flow of food and is accomplished through the steps of gastric blockage, gastrointestinal anastomosis, and enteroenteric anastomosis. After the surgery, insulin resistance in the patient’s body is eliminated, and the way food flows through the body after the surgery also promotes insulin secretion in the patient’s body, reduces apoptosis and proliferation of islet cells, restores the function of the pancreas, and cures diabetes.