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I am an EMT so I am aware of diabetic emergencies and watching over him w meds (this should be fun). He has been per-diabetic for many, many years, just never followed the guidelines. He moved in a year ago and I have been trying to feed him appropriate but he buys the big tub of ice cream, eats the half bag of Doritos in one sitting (my go to snack that I had put away, he ate the other half the other day and hid the bag like I couldn't hear him eating it). He sneaks out for breakfast and lunch (I know he has to get out). So now it is up to me to be the gate keeper. He never listened to mom. I advised exercise, eating moderation all of it. I am sure he wont listen. At least it is a good excuse for me to eat better (we eat rather healthy, I do all the cooking). He thinks the pill will be the fix it.
Its enough I have a room mate now I have to be his personal cook (I really hate that). I remind him all the time to eat right. He won't listen. He will be away for a week back home and he will eat like a sailor on leave. His excuse is the whole family before him were diabetic..... yeah they all ate like crap because they did not know better.............. I have more cookbooks than most and am adept at cooking. the challenge will be to get him to eat regulatory. He needs to lose a good 80 to 100, I can stand to lose 40 (to get to my ideal weight). So it might not be bad for me.

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Ferris, you have given this opinion before, but no where does it say that Aging Care is a site exclusively for those with dementia, and sniping at posters is neither nice or helpful.
To quote the admins "Our team also includes elder care experts who actively participate in the caregiver community, answering your questions and sharing their expertise in all aspects of elder care."
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Fifteen years ago or so I attended a class by a certified diabetic educator, when my husband was first diagnosed. Someone in the class asked for the name of a good diabetic cookbook. The answer was, "Any cookbook that shows nutrient values is excellent for use for people with diabetes." And that makes sense, doesn't it? There are no "diabetic" foods and no foods a person with diabetes can't eat. And if you know the nutrients, especially the carb amount and calories, you can adjust portion sizes and combine foods appropriately.

A person with diabetes can eat corn on the cob and mashed potatoes and a dinner roll and buttered squash and a piece of chocolate cake. But not at the same meal, please! Same for a person who is trying to loose weight. A good, healthy diet for the average person is a good healthy diet for a person with diabetes, too -- with perhaps some adjustments. If your dad's clinic offers self-care classes for newly diagnosed diabetics, attend them with him if you can.

That is the answer to the easy part of your questions, tgengine.

This is the harder part: "I remind him all the time to eat right. He won't listen." I'd say stop reminding him. He is not your child that you are trying to teach. He is your father. As an adult he is entitled to make is own decisions about what he eats. You do all the cooking so you have a great opportunity to influence what is available to eat, without lecturing or reminding or nagging. You are not in charge of what he orders at restaurants, or how often he goes. Just let those things go. I'd encourage Dad to attend whatever courses his clinic offers, so he is making informed decisions, and so he is hearing it from objective professionals. But then it is up to him what to do with that information.

You didn't mention any mental impairments. That might change my answer a bit. But as it is, cook healthy meals the both of you can eat. And give up the idea that you are in charge of his food intake.
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There may be cookbooks like that out there, but really it is just using common sense. I think you will have more success if you try to modify the kinds of foods he likes. You already know you have to try to limit his portion size... maybe try buying those little halloween size bags of doritos occasionally rather than the family size bag or some of those lite ice cream bars on occasion instead of a whole tub.
Subbing oven fried for deep fried, 2% or skim milk for full fat and cream, using lite mayo, dressings and butter, increasing whole grains, (high fiber pasta is really quite good now) and decreasing processed foods and white flour are good first steps.
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So sad. Forks over knives has some.....addiction is really hard on everyone. Its impossible to change people, so take care of you! Finding good healthy recipies balanced meals, etc is good....I myself have found that trying to control another persons addiction doesnt work. I had to detatch and let it go. When a persons own life becomes impossible for THEM they will make changes. Might be worth checkking out some proffessional help or peer support gruops for families with a member who has addiction or eating disorders. Al anon is also almost free....for some people, myself included, food is the drug of choice. I recovered from that many years ago, and reversed my diabetes, but some people in my family who tried to control my food only added to the problem......cooking healthy for the family is fine. Any online recipes that are low fat, with protien, veggies..some carbs like beans are ok....but the rest is on him. Its about the food, but its not about the food! :-) Good luck!
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There are many good and easy low carb recipes on the Internet. There are also cookbooks on Amazon dedicated to low carb living. Low carb is the way to go whether ketogenic, Atkins, or South Beach.
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My apologizes then...
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Diabetic Living has a great site for recipes. I found thousands of these diabetic recipes doing a google search. Enjoy - you sure don't have to sacrifice good taste to make these recipes healthy.
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This is a website for caregivers of those with dementia, we are not diet consultants. Go to your local library.
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Wasnt mentioned in OP but people can have eating disorders and dementia at the same time.....
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The American Diabetes Association has a very informative website, you might want to check there for cookbooks, tips on meal planning and an online community for advice.
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