Our Nutrition & Wellness Philosophy
We believe informed food choices are essential to living well. These behaviors are personalized, equitable, shaped through the lens of culture and community, and are guided by national standards and recommendations for health and wellbeing.
Scientific Foundations for Nutrition Education and Therapy
The ADA relies on a group of external diabetes experts to critically examine the total evidence as they write the annual updates to the Standards of Care in Diabetes (Standards of Care). Every five years, there is an in-depth review of the totality of evidence for the nutrition management of diabetes. This Nutrition Consensus report outlines the fundamentals for practitioners as they guide and support an individual’s approach to their own diabetes self-management strategies. You can find nutrition resources in our online store, the Abridged Standards of Care 2024 Section 5: Facilitating Positive Health Behaviors and Well-Being to Improve Health Outcomes Infographic, and nutrition training from our Institute of Learning.
Goals of Nutrition Management in People with Prediabetes and Diabetes
All health care team members involved in diabetes nutrition management should use evidence-based meal patterns that emphasize a variety of nutrient-dense foods in appropriate portions sizes to:
- Improve overall health, A1C, blood pressure, and cholesterol levels.
- Achieve and maintain body weight and composition goals.
- Delay or prevent diabetes complications.
Healthy eating encompasses more than just food. It involves personal and cultural preferences, health literacy and numeracy, access to healthy food choices, willingness and ability to make behavioral changes, as well as understanding the barriers to change.
Additionally, it is important to maintain the pleasure of eating by providing positive messages about food choices within the selected meal pattern(s) and provide practical tools for day-to-day meal planning. This includes an understanding of how food not only nourishes the body, but the whole person through memories, culture, and community.
The Nutrition Consensus report outlines seven key meal patterns individuals may use as they find the best strategies that work for them. Overall, there are several key factors that are common among the patterns:
- Emphasize selecting non-starchy vegetables and lean protein options.
- Emphasize choosing, when selected, quality carbohydrate foods.
- Focus on starchy vegetables, legumes, peas and lentils, whole grains, fruits, and milk.
- Minimize added sugars and refined grains and associated foods.
- Choose whole and minimally processed foods.
- Minimize added saturated fat and added sodium.
- Emphasize choosing foods to support dietary fiber requirements.
Reducing the overall carbohydrate intake for individuals with diabetes has demonstrated the most evidence for improving glycemia and may be applied in a variety of eating patterns that meet individual needs and preferences.
Healthy eating patterns for people with diabetes can also be used for people with prediabetes. Early treatment focused on moderate lifestyle changes can return blood glucose levels to a desirable range. Small changes such as losing 5% of weight and increasing physical activity can have a huge impact on delaying or preventing type 2 diabetes altogether. Learn more and locate a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-recognized lifestyle change program guided by a lifestyle coach trained to use an evidence-based curriculum.