Eat regular meals. Try to plan your meals around starchy foods such as bread, potatoes, rice, pasta, chapattis etc
Cereal such as Branflakes, Weetabix, Shredded Wheat, All Bran, Rice Krispies and Cornflakes
Plain biscuits like Rich Tea, Digestive, Hob Nobs etc.
Currant loaf, tea bread, scones, toasted teacakes
Include potatoes, rice, pasta, bread or cereals at each meal.
Eat teacakes, scones or fruit loaf instead of sweet cakes, sweet biscuits and pastries.
S a m p l e M e n u
Breakfast:
Fruit or unsweetened fruit juice
Wholegrain cereal with low fat milk
And /Or
Wholemeal toast with low fat spread
Light Meal:
Wholemeal or granary bread/wholegrain crackers/baked potato
Lean meat/fish/egg or low fat cheese
Plenty of mixed salad/vegetables
Fruit or no added sugar yoghurt
Main Meal:
Lean meat/fish/pulses
Potatoes/rice/pasta
Large serving of vegetables or salad
Sugar free dessert or fruit
Between Meals:
Fruit or plain biscuit (if hungry
borofergie said:Here you go Sid:
http://www.bwd.nhs.uk/general-informati ... 85358=1320
"Food and diabetes a good start".
Some pearls of wisdom from this leaflet:
Eat regular meals. Try to plan your meals around starchy foods such as bread, potatoes, rice, pasta, chapattis etc
borofergie said:Heres another one (I'm not even link mining for these I promise, they just come up on every search)
http://www.diabetes-carmarthenshire.com ... eating.pdf
Healthy Eating with Diabetes (or "Toes are overrated anyway")
I kid you not:
S a m p l e M e n u
Breakfast:
Fruit or unsweetened fruit juice
Wholegrain cereal with low fat milk
And /Or
Wholemeal toast with low fat spread
Light Meal:
Wholemeal or granary bread/wholegrain crackers/baked potato
Lean meat/fish/egg or low fat cheese
Plenty of mixed salad/vegetables
Fruit or no added sugar yoghurt
Main Meal:
Lean meat/fish/pulses
Potatoes/rice/pasta
Large serving of vegetables or salad
Sugar free dessert or fruit
Between Meals:
Fruit or plain biscuit (if hungry
Can I stop now Sid? I'm a bit worried that my BG is going to spike just by reading this disgusting nonsense.
Sid Bonkers said:Plus I'm not sure that is a standard NHS leaflet but probably one written by a particular trust 'Blackburn with Darwin' it may well be similar to some others but it was not my experience to be given anything like this. I was advised about portion control from day one, I wasnt given any exact diet and it wasnt until I did my own research here and elsewhere that I gained the control I have now but at no time was I ever told to eat a high carb diet.
Sid Bonkers said:Extremist clap trap IMO
sweetLea said:Omg! Unreal!!!
How are people surviving? :shock:
Sid Bonkers said:"where does the NHS state that diabetics should eat a HIGH CARB DIET?"
catherinecherub said:I cannot see anything in the advice for newly diagnosed from this forum that says to cut out potatoes rice, pasta, bread or cereals.
daisy1 said:Reduce your carbohydrates
A large number of people on this forum have chosen to reduce the amount of carbohydrates they eat as they have found this to be an effective way of improving (lowering) their blood sugar levels.
The carbohydrates which tend to have the most pronounced effect on blood sugar levels tend to be starchy carbohydrates such as rice, pasta, bread, potatoes and similar root vegetables, flour based products (pastry, cakes, biscuits, battered food etc) and certain fruits.
borofergie said:None of them write "eat a high carbohydrate diet" (mainly because most of them don't even address the issue of carbohydrate) but all of them are suggesting a high carbohydrate diet.
Do you honestly think that recommending that Diabetics eat potaoes, rice and bread with every meal is sensible advice? :***:
borofergie said:Sid Bonkers said:Extremist clap trap IMO
Who are you calling an extremist?
Sid Bonkers said:[
As for the :***: smiley I really do find a smiley titled *** quite offensive.
borofergie said:I am calling the statement that the NHS is advising a high carb diet extremist clap trap but your twisting my words to fit your argument as usual, BTW how is Eddies blog these days?
catherinecherub said:Nobody is right or wrong, you have to devise your own plan. I was told on diagnosis about the role of carbohydrates and to find a level suitable for me by testing and cutting them down until I found a suitable levels. My DR. sees me as a NH patient so where did he get his advice? The problem seems to me to be not the dietary advice but the lack of testing facilities for Type2's. If this advice is being handed out minus a meter and educating patients about the use of the meter and what it tells you about the meals you have eaten, there wouldn't be such a problem.
borofergie said:catherinecherub said:I cannot see anything in the advice for newly diagnosed from this forum that says to cut out potatoes rice, pasta, bread or cereals.
Here you go Catherine (from Daisy's standard intro post):
daisy1 said:Reduce your carbohydrates
A large number of people on this forum have chosen to reduce the amount of carbohydrates they eat as they have found this to be an effective way of improving (lowering) their blood sugar levels.
The carbohydrates which tend to have the most pronounced effect on blood sugar levels tend to be starchy carbohydrates such as rice, pasta, bread, potatoes and similar root vegetables, flour based products (pastry, cakes, biscuits, battered food etc) and certain fruits.
That (sensible) advice is exactly the opposite from what the NHS is suggesting - making sure that you eat starchy carbs and/or bread, potatoes, pasta and rice with every meal
I'm not quite sure why you are disagreeing with me Catherine. I'm a huge advocate of any method that helps diabetics get their BG under control (be it low-carb, medium-carb low-GI, portion-control). A common theme of all those diets is carbohydrate control.
I am merely pointing out (at Sid's request) that these leaflets do not mention carbohydrate control, suggest lots of food which are high in carbohydrate (and high-GI) and in fact contain advice to eat starchy carbs with every meal.
catherinecherub said:I am not disagreeing with you Stephen just a little confused. You say that the advice on the forum is to cut out starchy carbs when in fact it says to cut down. There is a difference and perhaps this is where the confusion comes in, we interpret things in different ways.
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