Menus prescribed for diabetes management by Malawian referral hospitals are loaded with calories from carbohydrates and may worsen diabetes condition

Author:

Nkhata Smith G12ORCID,Chibwana Gracian2

Affiliation:

1. Food Processing and Nutrition, Department of Agriculture and Food Systems, Faculty of Life Sciences and Natural Resources, Natural Resources College, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Lilongwe, Malawi

2. Food Technology, Department of Agriculture and Food Systems, Faculty of Life Sciences and Natural Resources, Natural Resources College, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Lilongwe, Malawi

Abstract

Background: Management of diabetes demands reduction of carbohydrates and moderation of total calories, fats and protein to promote weight loss while controlling postprandial blood glucose. Hospitals prescribe menus to diabetic patients to achieve these reasons. Whether these menus provide meals that help improve diabetes outcome remains unknown. Aim: Therefore, this study assessed six menus from six different referral hospitals in Malawi. Method: We formulated three separate diets ( n = 3) encompassing breakfast, 10 am snack, lunch, 3 pm snack and super that a diabetic person would consume in a day as prescribed by each menu. We developed nutritionally adequate meals based on foods listed on the menu. We calculated, using the Malawi Food Composition Table (MFCT), total available carbohydrates, energy, protein, total fats, SAFA, MUFA and PUFA that each diet provides. We averaged the nutrient content from the three diets. Results: Menus from QECH and ST Joseph Mission Hospital provide significantly higher total carbohydrates ( p = 0.001), total energy ( p = 0.000) and fats ( p = 0.01) but contain similar proteins ( p = 0.761). The proportion of energy from carbohydrates for all the menus is very high and ranges from 68–81% while protein and fat proportions are lower and range from 7–16% and 7–20%, respectively. Conclusion: These menus have high propensity to increase postprandial blood glucose and promote weight gain that could be harmful to a diabetic person. All the menus deviate from a somehow recommended energy contribution of approximately 50:25:25 from carbohydrates, fat and protein, respectively.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference37 articles.

1. Weight Gain as a Risk Factor for Clinical Diabetes Mellitus in Women

2. Composition Table (2019). South African Medical Research Council, Biostatistics Unit – SAFOODS, PO Box 19070, Tygerberg 7505, SOUTH AFRICA' AUTHOR2011.

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