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HomeTopicsDiabetic DietEating Out
Eating Away From Home: |
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Try This! If you refrigerate your insulin, put your car keys in your friend's refrigerator along with your insulin. When it's time to go home, you won't get far if you've forgotten to retrieve your insulin. |
Traveling and on the Road
Travel can be unpredictable, so take extra food (and insulin or other medications) to carry you through any situation. Airlines are generally able to accommodate special dietary requests, but their idea of appropriate diabetic foods may not be the same as yours. Banquets and restaurants may serve generous or skimpy portions, leaving you to figure out just which exchanges you might have covered.
But what do you do if the plane is held at the gate for a long delay, or the banquet speaker is so longwinded that you're eating hours later than you'd planned? A considerate waiter may be able to slip you some rolls or crackers but you'll be better off if you pack a few emergency supplies.
What Should I Drink?
In this case, knowledge is power. You'll need to know whether the punch has added alcohol, whether the tea is sweetened with sugar or artificial sweetener, and whether the soft drinks are regular or diet.
Ask the server, explaining why it's important for you to know. Sometimes people will think you're just being picky and tell you what they think you want to hear. A brief, clear explanation of why you need the information is more likely to motivate people to give you accurate information.
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Try This!
Some glucose testing strips can be used a second time to test whether or not a drink contains sugar. Turn two already used strips so the unused (back) sides are facing up. Place a drop of regular soda on one and a drop of diet soda on the other and watch for a few seconds. If the strip can be used as a sugary drink detector, the strip with regular soda will turn a dark purple color while the diet soda will cause no change in the strip color. |
Guests Are Coming!
Gracious hosts will try to accommodate their guests' special needs to some extent. If you've invited someone with diabetes to a party or other special event where food will be served, you can take a few simple steps to make their experience pleasant and healthy:
- Serve a variety of drinks and snacks so that guests can choose from several options.
- Label items on a buffet and note low fat, low salt, and low carbohydrate options.
- Save nutrition labels from packaged or canned food so guests can check ingredients.
- Search the Internet for sugar-free recipes and test them out when friends who have diabetes come over.
- The Diabetic Exchange Diet, Nutrition Labels and the Food Pyramid
- Creating Diabetic Meal Plans for a Balanced Diet
- Diabetics! Healthy Snacks are Good for You!
- Diabetic Foods for Main Course
- Fast Food Nutrition and Special Occasions for Diabetics
- Diabetic Meal Plans
- Diabetes and Omega-3 Fatty Acids
- The Diabetes Diet: Living Well With Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes
- Diet Additions for Diabetics: Buckwheat and Cinnamon May Help Control Blood Sugar
- Vision Loss and Diabetes: The Carbohydrate Link
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