Treatment
The goal of treatment is
to lower your blood sugar and improve your bodys
use of insulin with:
- Meal planning
- Exercise
- Weight loss
Weight Loss, Diet, and
Exercise
The first steps in the treatment of Type II Diabetes are
weight loss, if needed, and an appropriate diet. Weight
loss can reduce the need for medication as well as the
risk of developing complications. Planning a diet that
will provide healthy amounts of carbohydrates, protein,
fats, and cholesterol and help control body weight often
requires close attention from a doctor and possibly a
nutritionist. A doctor can also suggest an appropriate
exercise regimen.
Meal planning
When you eat, your body changes food into blood sugar.
Your blood sugar goes up. A good meal plan slows this
rise. The meal plan for a person with diabetes is the
same as anyone else.
- Low in fat
- Has moderate amounts of
protein
- Contains starches, like
those in beans, vegetables and grains (such as
breads, cereals, noodles and rice).
You and your dietician
will work out a meal plan just for you.
Exercise.
Being active helps your cells take in blood
sugar. So exercise plays a major role in your treatment
plan.
Tell your doctor about the
kinds of exercise you do now. Your health care provider
will help you fit them to your new lifestyle. If you
dont exercise, you may want to become more active.
It would be great if you could be active on most days of
the week for a total of 30 minutes, which can be broken
down into short sessions. If you're not used to
exercising start slow. Even a 5-minute walk can get you
moving.
Weight loss
Losing weight is another big part of your diabetes
treatment. It will help your body use insulin better. The
best way to lose weight is to exercise and follow a
healthy meal plan. With a healthy meal plan, you eat less
calories because you fill up on low fat foods, not fatty
foods. Decide with your health care provider how much you
should lose. Sometimes, just 10 or 20 pounds is enough to
bring diabetes under control.
Then decide how much you
want to lose per week. One pound per week should be the
maximum. Slow weight loss is healthier and easier.
Glucose
Monitoring at Home
Effective control of diabetes depends on patients'
regularly checking (monitoring) their blood glucose
levels at home. This usually involves pricking a finger
with a needle, putting a drop of blood on a test strip,
and inserting the strip into a machine (blood glucose
monitor) that gives the glucose level within a few
minutes. Regular monitoring of blood glucose levels helps
patients with diabetes keep a record of how well their
blood glucose is controlled.
Your health care provider
will tell you how often to test your blood. Write down
each result, along with the time and date. You will soon
learn how well your treatment plan is working, and you
will learn how exercise and food affects you.
Sometimes, healthful
habits like eating well, losing weight and exercising are
not enough. In that case, your doctor may have you take:
- Diabetes pills, or
- Insulin shots
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