Nutrition & diet guide

Food guidance should support treatment, recovery, and dignity

Patients often ask what to eat and what to avoid. This guide helps them prepare safer diet questions, understand common nutrition risks, and avoid fear-based or extreme advice.

Safety note: Diet advice must be individualized. Children, pregnancy, kidney disease, diabetes, liver disease, eating difficulty, severe weight loss, or multiple medicines need professional guidance.
1. Start with the diagnosis Diet advice is safest when it matches the real condition: diabetes, kidney disease, liver disease, anemia, pregnancy, bone health, infection recovery, or medicine use.
2. Build a balanced plate Most patients need regular meals with protein, fiber-rich carbohydrate, vegetables, healthy fats, safe water, and culturally realistic food choices.
3. Watch deficiencies and risks Iron, vitamin B12, folate, vitamin D, calcium, iodine, protein, and hydration problems can affect energy, blood counts, bone health, nerves, and recovery.
4. Avoid unsafe diet extremes Very restrictive diets, sudden fasting, unverified supplements, and stopping prescribed medicine because of diet claims can be dangerous.

Calm food planning

A simple balanced-plate conversation

This is not a strict prescription. It is a simple way to begin a safer conversation with a doctor, dietitian, or trained health worker.

  • Protein source: fish, egg, meat, lentils, beans, milk, yogurt, tofu, or another suitable local option.
  • Energy source: rice, roti, potato, oats, whole grains, or other carbohydrates matched to health needs.
  • Vegetables and fruits: chosen safely for digestion, diabetes, kidney disease, allergies, and local availability.
  • Fluids and salt: adjusted for dehydration, heart disease, kidney disease, blood pressure, vomiting, diarrhea, or fever.
  • Medicine timing: some drugs need food, some need empty stomach, and some interact with supplements.

Printable diet discussion checklist

My conditionWhat diagnosis or report should guide my diet?
My usual foodWhat do I actually eat in a normal day?
My risksDo I have diabetes, kidney disease, anemia, pregnancy, weight loss, allergy, or swallowing difficulty?
My questionsWhich foods should I limit, which foods should I add, and when should I follow up?

Helpful RX tools for diet safety