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Parents: 10 Tips For A Diabetes-Friendly Halloween

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diabetes Halloween

Halloween is the kickoff to a season of sweet indulgences. For parents of children with diabetes, nothing can be more frightening than a holiday full of sugar-laden treats. But with a little planning and creativity, it’s still possible to have a healthy Halloween and holiday season.

The following tips can help you and your family enjoy the holiday season and still keep diabetes management on track.

RELATED: 7 Diabetes Management Plan Essentials

1. Include your child in planning.

Come up with a plan for dealing with sweets and treats that your child with diabetes agrees with. Children are more likely to be on board when you include them in planning because they know what to expect.

A popular choice is to ration candy or desserts for a period of time. “You can have one or two pieces of candy each day for a week.” Make sure this plan goes equally for everyone in the house, parents too!

2. Buy treats your child does not like.

Your child is less likely to overindulge if the sweet treats you have in the house do not tempt them–or you! Also, make sure to have healthy snacks available to give your child an option instead of Halloween or other seasonal candy.

3. Purchase treats on the day you need them.

Buy treats the day you plan to eat or distribute them. If you are buying candy or goodies for a holiday or gathering, keep them in the house for as short a period of time as possible and give away the leftovers.

4. Consider some alternatives.

Work on arts and crafts projects, play Halloween games, watch a Halloween movie, visit a haunted house or make a special Halloween snack with your child. These activities are fun and do not revolve around sweets.

5. Choose non-candy treats.

Instead of candy give out Halloween-themed pencils, bookmarks, stickers, small plastic bugs, glow-in-the-dark rubber balls, or glow sticks.

6. Eat before trick-or-treating.

Eating a well-balanced meal will keep your child full and energized, and less likely to overeat candy. Halloween-themed meals like ghoulish eyeball meatballs, mummy personal pizza or jack-o-lantern stuffed peppers are easy to create.

7. Make a trade.

Offer to buy back your child’s candy and give them money to buy toys or games. Trade candy for going out to the movies or the arcade. Donate the rest to a charity or a children’s hospital.

8. Use candy to treat hypoglycemia.

Save some of the candy for when your child has hypoglycemia. Divide them up into servings of 15g carbohydrates and bag them individually. Store them in easy-to-reach places, such as your car or your child’s backpack.

9. Read the Nutrition Facts panel.

Sugar-free does not mean carbohydrate-free. Sugar-free candy may provide just as many carbohydrates as regular candy.

Also, sugar-free candy may contain sugar alcohols, which may cause gastrointestinal upset in your child. The Nutrition Facts panel will tell you if the candy has sugar alcohols.

10. Look for carbohydrate counts.

Knowing the carbohydrate count will help you include sweets in your child’s meal plan. Most individual snack-sized and mini candies do not have a Nutrition Facts panel, but carbohydrate counts can easily be found on the manufacturer’s website or by using other online websites such as My Fitness Pal or CalorieKing.com.

 

Constance Brown-Riggs

Constance Brown-Riggs, MSEd, RD, CDE, CDN is a registered dietitian, certified diabetes educator, national speaker and author of The African American Guide to Living Well with Diabetes. She is a Dannon One Yogurt Every Day Nutrition Advisor.

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