16 Myths of a Diabetic Diet. Karen Hanson Chalmers
diet.
Myth: People with diabetes should exercise every day in order to stay healthy.
Chapter 14: DINING OUT WITH DIABETES
Myth: People with diabetes shouldn’t eat out.
Chapter 15: DIABETES AND FOOD CRAVINGS
Myth: People with diabetes don’t get food cravings.
Chapter 16: MAKING FAVORITE RECIPES HEALTHIER
Myth: People with diabetes should only use diabetic cookbooks and recipes.
Appendix A: “YOUR TURN” ANSWER KEY
Appendix B: REGISTERED DIETITIANS AND CERTIFIED DIABETES EDUCATORS
As a person with long-standing type 1 diabetes (almost 54 years at this writing), I have learned a good deal about this disease over the years. My information has come from doctors, nurse educators, dietitians, family members, and friends. It has come in the form of books, conversations, magazine articles, and, more recently, online articles. And it has come from practicing the art of living with diabetes. Probably the most important thing I have learned in all this time is that I can always learn more.
When I was diagnosed at the tender age of four, diabetes care was very different than it is now. I was taught to categorize and weigh all of my foods (carbs, proteins, and fats alike) by my father, a scientist and professor. He and my mother learned all they could from my doctor at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, Dr. Priscilla White. In addition to diet planning and measuring, our tools included metal and glass syringes with separate metal needles that regularly became dull. My father tested the needles on his thigh as he sharpened them! All the injection equipment had to be kept in a special sterile bath between uses. My parents, and soon I, tested my urine for sugar several times a day using an eye dropper and a tablet that boiled and changed colors in the test tube. In short, we had none of the wonderfully liberating tools of today: glucose monitors, insulin pumps, glucose sensors, carbohydrate counting, the glycemic index, detailed food labels, and a half-century of research and studies aimed at understanding and improving our lives.
I first heard some of the diet myths described in this book when I was in my early twenties, while I attended a class at the Joslin Diabetes Center. Among the students were a number of newly diagnosed patients. I answered their numerous questions and misconceptions with what I hoped were accurate, even encouraging, anecdotes of my own struggles to balance food with insulin and with energy output (both physical and mental). I was horrified to learn that some people believed I could not eat anything with sugar in it! I have always loved fruits and vegetables and could not imagine living without them, let alone without the many varieties of rice, pasta, potatoes, corn, breads, and the occasional ice cream or cookie. I remember the mother of a five-year-old child asking me whether her daughter could ever again live a “normal” life and eat “normal” food. I hope she learned from the classes (and perhaps from me) that she not only could live a long, healthy, “normal” life, but most likely would.
Through the years I have encountered people living in the “diabetes Paleolithic” period, as I call it. They seem to carry the remnants of a genetic memory of a time before insulin was discovered and when having type 1 or “juvenile” diabetes was a death warrant: you could eat no carbohydrate because it would raise your blood sugar, which, without insulin, would slowly take away your life; therefore, starvation caused your early demise instead. It wasn’t a pleasant choice, obviously. Comments from these “diabetes dinosaurs,” such as, “Oh, you’re diabetic? My grandmother died of that. She ate too much sugar,” always sent me into training mode, and I would carefully explain how sugars are a natural part of many foods that we can and should eat, how we have to measure our food intake against our insulin doses and exercise, and how life with diabetes is a balancing act rather than a process of restriction or denial. Sometimes, the person listened politely, and I could almost see the information trickling out the other ear!
But for every diabetes dinosaur I have met, I have known several modern-day creatures: people who are genuinely interested in the subject, open minded, and pleased to ask questions and to learn more about life with diabetes. I hope you are that kind of person—with or without diabetes—because Amy Campbell and Karen Chalmers have here presented a wealth of information to live by. Their presentation is conversational, well organized, and chock full of comforting facts about eating healthfully. 16 Myths of a Diabetic Diet is meant for people with newly diagnosed diabetes, those who have had it for decades, and their families, friends, and neighbors—in fact, for everyone who likes to eat.
Cynthia M. Shaler
Boalsburg, PA
People with diabetes have identified “diet” as one of the most difficult parts of managing their condition. The word “diet” simply means “the food we eat to nourish our bodies.” Diet is important to all people because the way you nourish your body affects growth and development, influences how you prevent and fight disease, and dictates your weight, energy level, and how you feel every day. Unfortunately, over the years, the term “diet” seems to have taken on a different meaning, particularly for those with diabetes. Currently, there are many misconceptions and a lot of negativity associated with the term.
The term diabetic diet has been around for centuries, dating as far back as 1550 B.C. Fortunately, since then many positive changes have taken place in nutrition science as it relates to diabetes. From the earliest treatment using rigidly controlled, semi-starvation diets to the “all foods can fit” thinking at the beginning of the 21st century, we have now arrived at nutrition science as we know it today, a science we call medical nutrition therapy.
Today, more and more people are being diagnosed with diabetes. For many, their first thoughts and questions usually center on food: “What can I eat?”, “What foods should I avoid?”, “How much can I eat?”, “Do I have to give up all of my favorite foods?”, “Am I always going to feel restricted?” The list goes on and on. Today, more and more people with diabetes are seeking a registered dietitian’s care and counseling so that they can update their knowledge about food and diabetes and develop a realistic and individualized meal plan, together with their dietitian, to ensure healthy eating. Learning about current research and how it relates to food is essential for managing your diabetes.
Here are some of the facts you will learn when you meet with a registered dietitian:
• Food that is good for you is the same food that is good for the whole family!
• You can fit foods that contain sugar into your daily intake—you do not have to give up your favorite foods!
• You can eat a wide choice of foods—variety in meal planning is “in,” restriction of foods is “out.”
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