Diet for a person with Type 1

Hi everyone,
I just joined. I do not have diabetes, but my mother-in-law does.
She has been handling it pretty well over the years, but is now 80
and seems to be needing more help with her diet and medications. I
have an appointment with the local hospital dietician, but I would
love to get some input from anyone who has been dealing with this for
a while. My husband and I are trying to educate ourselves so we know
what is best for mom. Eventually she will be moving in with us
(maybe sooner than we think).
Any advice will be much appreciated.
Thanks
Theresa Wilkins
wilkinstheresa@…

6 Responses to “Diet for a person with Type 1”

  1. Sheila Brennan Says:

    — In type1_diabetes@y…, “wilkinsplace” <wilkinstheresa@h…
    If she is type 1, then diet is just one factor, and not a
    comparatively complicated one. Since you mention diet and
    medications, but not insulin injections and blood sugar monitoring, I
    have to ask, are you sure she is type 1 and not type 2?
    All type 1 diabetics require an outside source of insulin, usually by
    subcutaneous injection. There is no oral insulin, and oral
    medications to help insulin work are not prescribed for type 1
    diabetics.
    Type 2 diabetics often can control their blood sugars without insulin
    injections. They may use diet, exercise, and/or oral medications that
    facilitate insulin use or production to control their blood sugars.
    Jerry

  2. Shelton Christiane Says:

    Welcome to the group! A diet, huh? Well, I know this won’t be much
    help to you, but it really depends on the person. You’ll have to ask
    her how much carbohydrate she is allowed for each meal. My son, for
    instance, gets 3 ‘carbs’ at breakfast, 1 at a morning snack, 4 at
    lunch, 1 for afternoon snack, 4 at dinner, and 2 carbs and a protein
    at bedtime. Now, if she is using this ‘carb’ system, one ‘carb’
    equals 15 grams total carbohydrate, so, say 1 cup of 2% milk is 11
    grams total carbs, so 1 1/2 cups would be one carb. The number of
    carbs vary for each person, and some diabetic diets don’t even use
    this system. If you are looking for a general kind of thing, low fat
    (because of predisposition to heart disease) and low sugar (this is
    on food labels under total carbohydrate it says ’sugars). The more
    straight sugar she has, the higher her blood sugar will go, and
    faster. Generally, if you were gonna be ‘good’ (meaning boring LOL)
    you would only have things with no added sugar, and low fat. Be

    careful though- most ‘low fat’ things add sugar for taste, and
    most ‘no sugar added’ things add fat for taste! If you cook, there
    are alot of new sugar substitutes out there that cook and taste just
    like sugar, but are digested differently, so they don’t affect the
    blood sugar as much. There is a good one out now, but I forgot the
    name, maybe someone else will pop in with it. I hope others will join
    this thread, as this is a topic we haven’t discussed much yet!
    Welcome again, sorry I rambled a bit! Plaese ask any more questions
    you have!
    Melissa
    — In type1_diabetes@y…, “wilkinsplace” <wilkinstheresa@h…

  3. Al Naoma Says:

    Well, I guess I’m not sure. I assumed she had type 1 because several
    others in her family have diabetes as well and she is not overweight,
    nor is she a sugar junkie. From what I’ve read about type 2, the
    person is usually overweight and typically eats a lot of sweets and
    carbs, and often may be the only one in the family with diabetes.
    But again, I am trying to educate myself about it, so I may be way
    off base.
    I do know that diet is only one part of keeping it under control. My
    mom-in-law is very active for 80 years old, eats well overall (but
    I’m thinking she is eating too much starch/carbs?), and takes her
    medication regularly as well as testing her sugar levels a couple
    times a day.
    Thanks for the response.
    Theresa

  4. Al Naoma Says:

    Melissa,
    Thanks for the reply. You didn’t ramble at all. I appreciate all
    the input. I like to get several perspectives on things from people
    who are actually dealing with the situation.
    We have an appointment with the dietician at the hospital this month,
    but it’s 3 weeks away. In the meantime her sugar continues to run a
    bit high off and on. The whole carb thing is exactly what I’m trying
    to figure out and the information you gave is helpful, in just
    knowing that it is different for each person and how it works in
    general. In the meantime I have just been trying to get her to go
    easy on the carbs. She does have high cholesterol and corrated
    (spelling?) arteries in her neck, as well as high blood pressure
    intermittently. So we have several things to keep an eye on and she
    takes about 8 different meds for different things, which I guess
    isn’t too out of the ordinary for someone who is 80.

    Thanks again for the info.
    Theresa

  5. Shelton Christiane Says:

    Hey! One more thing- I noticed you said you’re having trouble with
    starches- in general, the less processed it is, the better. So, if
    you have a good bread store around, maybe you could get her to try a
    bread othr than plain old white, something more natural, less
    carbs/more fiber kind of thing. Or brown rice instead of white, etc.
    The dietician should be able to give you lots of ideas. I have one
    carb free thing that she may like- if she likes tuna or egg or
    chicken salad, anything like that, wrap it in a lettuce leaf instead
    of on bread- that would be pretty much carb free and relatively
    healthy if you use a good mayo. Get into reading labels. Here are
    some more generalizations I forgot to tell you- meat, dairy (other
    than milk and ice cream) and veggies (other than tomatoes, corn, and
    potatoes) are pretty much carb free. We keep string cheese, celery,
    and hot dogs in the fridge for when he wants a snack, but can’t have
    a carb. Popcorn is pretty low, too, only about 1 carb in 3 cups.

    Melissa
    — In type1_diabetes@y…, “wilkinsplace” <wilkinstheresa@h…

  6. Al Naoma Says:

    Thanks Melissa! Very helpful.

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