|
Diabetes Diet Article
Diabetes Diet
The proper diet is critical to diabetes treatment. It can help someone with diabetes:
- Achieve and maintain desirable weight. Many people with diabetes
can control their blood glucose by losing weight and keeping it off.
- Maintain normal blood glucose levels.
- Prevent heart and blood vessel diseases, conditions that tend to occur in people with diabetes.
A doctor will usually prescribe diet as part of diabetes treatment. A dietitian or nutritionist can recommend a diet that is healthy, but also interesting and easy to follow. No one has to be limited to a preprinted, standard diet. Someone with diabetes can get assistance in the following ways:
- A doctor can recommend a local nutritionist or dietitian.
- The local American Diabetes Association, American Heart
Association, and American Dietetic Association can provide names of
qualified dietitians or nutritionists and information about diet
planning.
- Local diabetes centers at large medical clinics, hospitals, or medical universities usually have dietitians and nutritionists on staff.
The guidelines for diabetes diet planning include the following:
- Spacing meals throughout the day, instead of eating heavy meals
once or twice a day, can help a person avoid extremely high or low
blood glucose levels.
- With few exceptions, the best way to lose weight is gradually:
one or two pounds a week. Strict diets must never be
undertaken without the supervision of a doctor.
- People with diabetes have twice the risk of developing heart disease as those without diabetes, and high blood cholesterol levels raise the risk of heart disease. Losing weight and reducing intake of saturated fats and cholesterol, in favor of unsaturated and monounsaturated fats, can help lower blood cholesterol.
- Studies show that foods with fiber, such as fruits, vegetables, peas, beans, and whole-grain breads and cereals may help lower blood glucose. However, it seems that a person must eat much more fiber than the average American now consumes to get this benefit. A doctor or nutritionist can advise someone about adding fiber to a diet.
| Points to Remember
|
- Exchange lists are useful in planning a diabetes diet. They place foods with similar nutrients and calories into groups. With the help of a nutritionist, the person plans the number of servings from each exchange list that he or she should eat throughout the day. Diets that use exchange lists offer more choices than preprinted diets. More information on exchange lists is available from nutritionists and from the American Diabetes Association.
http://www.diabetestestingcenter.com
http://www.anxietydisordernews.info
Diabetic Diet Book News
diabetic diet book
Just published “Denby the Dog with Diabetes” is written by Frances Rabone – a Wellington author and health counsellor. The book is targeted at children who are newly diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. It traces the symptoms, diagnosis and ...
Read moreNew book demystifies diabetes for Kiwi kids - Scoop
Mixing memoir, a wellness program and inspirational advice, Jackson's book is a work of personal passion. Jackson's struggles with his health and weight have been well-documented; he's tried every diet, spent countless hours in gyms and even had ...
Read moreP'fit 4 print: 'Body With Soul: Slash Sugar, Cut Cholesterol, and Get ... - Pensacola News Journal
New Delhi, Nov 16 (IANS) If your child asks you for some loose cash for eating at the school canteen or a pizza luncheon - consider not giving in, for his sake! A recent study reveals that 85 percent of school children between 10-14 years, diagnosed ...
Read moreDump the junk food, save your child from diabetes - Newstrack India
A slew of scientific evidence, more than 50 years of it, allows you to take out the steak knife and eat up, according to author and science journalist Gary Taubes. But put those potato chips away. Doctors, students and those with an interest in ...
Read moreAuthor: Carbs have led to obese America - Columbia Missourian
It was just a decade ago that doctors were telling us to eat more pasta and pizza to stay healthy and live longer. Then the flavor of the day became oily fish and nuts, the buzzword being the seemingly magic cure-all: omega-3. Over the past two ...
Read moreEat Right, Live Well - Egypt Today
For years, Stacie Fox feared the night. From the moment she went to bed, sleeplessness taunted her. Just as she began to drift off, it would jerk her awake again. As a result, she waded through her days with aching joints, swollen glands and a leaden ...
Read moreThe sleepless epidemic - Globe and Mail
There are those who buy cookbooks as much to read them as cook from them. Even noncooks may spend hours watching food shows on television, or devouring chef’s memoirs and “foodie” mysteries as if they were, well ... popcorn. The newly published ...
Read moreNot your average popcorn - Jacksonville Daily Progress
Not much happened on the occasion of Children’s Day here today. The day is celebrated to mark the birth anniversary of Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru, first prime minister of India. Normally, on the day, schools organise cultural events, fun games, quiz ...
Read moreFarmers staging dharna on rail tracks in Mansa on Friday. Tribune ... - Tribune
Forget those faddish diets: the grapefruit diet, the South Beach diet, the cabbage soup diet, Posh Spice’s latest starvation diet. There’s only one diet real men need to worry about and that’s the Paleo Diet - aka the Caveman Diet - which, in ...
Read moreThe Ray Mears caveman diet - Times Online
If you or someone you know suffers from diabetes, then understanding the disease often becomes a way of life—a life that can be enhanced and improved by learning the latest about diabetic treatment and daily management of a disease that affects ...
Read more