Information for Patients - Diabetes Healthy Eating Advice
Eating a healthy diet is an essential part of the treatment for diabetes and will help to control your blood glucose levels, blood cholesterol and blood pressure. The information in this guide is suitable for most family members. However some people need more fat in their diet such as infants and young children and older people if their appetites and food intake is poor.
Table detailing Dietary Advice on Healthier Food Choices
FOOD GROUPS | FOODS TO CHOOSE... | INSTEAD OF... |
Starchy Foods Base your meals around these foods | Bread - all types including granary, rye, pumpernickel, wholemeal, high fibre white, white, pitta bread. Chapatti, crispbreads Porridge, breakfast cereal e.g. oat flakes, wheat biscuits, branflakes, muesli Rice (especially basmati), pasta and noodles Boiled, baked, steamed, dry roasted potatoes. Yams and sweet potatoes | Sugar-coated breakfast cereals Fried rice Deep fried chips |
Fruit and Vegetables Aim for at least 5 portions /day | All vegetables and salad Fresh fruit - all kinds. Tinned fruit in its own juice and stewed fruit using a sweetener Dried fruit | Tinned fruit in syrup |
Dairy Foods 2-3 servings /day | Skimmed or semi-skimmed milk Diet or low fat yoghurt or fromage frais Cottage cheese Lower fat cheeses e.g. half-fat cheddar, Edam, Brie, Camembert | Full-fat milk Cream Cream cheese |
Meat, Fish and alternatives 2 servings /day | Lean red meat, poultry (without skin) Fish-fresh, frozen, tinned in water, brine or tomato sauce. Try to include at least 1 portion of oily fish each week Eggs Pulses - bean, chickpeas, lentils. Tofu Quorn Nuts - as a main meal to replace meat | Fatty meats, meat pies and pasties, sausage rolls, pork pies Deep fried battered fish Scotch eggs Salted nuts |
Foods Rich in Sugar Keep to the minimum | Plain scones, fruit buns, muffins, teacakes, plain biscuits (e.g. cream crackers, rich tea, oatcakes, garibaldi and ginger nuts) and malt loaf Fruit - fresh, tinned (in natural juice) or stewed Diet or low fat yoghurt. Sugar free instant desserts, custard and milk puddings - if homemade an artificial sweetener can be used No added sugar or sugar free squash and diet/low calorie fizzy drinks Small amounts of ordinary or reduced sugar jam and marmalade Hermesetas, Candarel, Sweetex or similar supermarket brands of artificial sweetener | Sweet biscuits, cakes and pastries Rich sugary puddings Full fat yoghurt Squash and fizzy drinks sweetened with sugar Honey, treacle, syrup Sugar, glucose, sorbitol, fructose |
Foods Rich in Fat Keep to the minimum | Grilled, baked, boiled, steamed, dry roasted or microwaved foods. If cooking oil required try olive or rapeseed oil. For a spread on bread etc use a low-fat spread or margarine based on olive or rapeseed oil | Fried foods Butter, ghee, lard suet or hard margarines |
Looking at Food Labels:
The following guide will help you decide whether a food contains 'a lot' or 'a little' fat and/or sugar. For ready meals or foods eaten in large amounts use the 'per serving' figure on the label. For snacks or foods eaten in small amounts use the 'per 100g' figure on the label
Guide to Food Labeling
A lot is: | A little is: |
20g of fat or more | 3g of fat or less |
10g sugar or more | 2g of sugar or less |
Reference:
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