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.