How to develop diets that assist in the control of diabetes.

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Presentation transcript:

How to develop diets that assist in the control of diabetes.

 No Concentrated Sweets  Calorie Count

 Do the limitations of a strict calorie count diet affect the resident’s quality of life?  Will the resident be compliant with a calorie count diet?  Will a no concentrated sweets (NCS) diet significantly affect the resident’s health?

 Is simpler to handle  Usually provides approximately 2,000 calories per day  Requires purchasing sugar free products  Must be ordered by a physician  Does not require preparation of special foods for diabetics

 Provide most effective control of blood sugar levels  Require good planning  Require exchange planning  Require understanding of carbohydrates and how they affect blood sugar levels

 Converted to sugar by the body  Increase sugar levels in the body  Diabetics have more trouble controlling  Less processing equals longer digestive time

 Menu  Foods served  Receipts for foods purchased  Times meals are served

 Requires extensive staff training  Requires some understanding of diabetes

 Mrs. Jones  Long time resident  New diagnosis of diabetes  New order for a 2,000 calorie diet  You offer only NCS

 Calorie count or NCS – the choice is yours.  Documentation is a requirement no matter which diet you chose  Exchanges = like for like foods

 Assisted Living Residences, West Virginia Title 64, Series 14. §§16-5D-5, 17; (2010)  Williams, S.R. (1994). Essentials of nutrition and diet therapy. (6 th Ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Mosby.