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Patient guide

Carbohydrate Counting and Insulin Guide

This guide helps you estimate the carbohydrates in a meal and work out your insulin dose. It's meant to be used alongside the plan your doctor has already given you — not instead of it.

Before you use this guide

Always confirm with your doctor first. The insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio (ICR) and insulin sensitivity factor (ISF) used in this guide's calculator must come from your own doctor as they are specific to you and change as your pregnancy progresses. This page is an educational tool, not a substitute for medical advice. Never start or change an insulin dose without your care team's guidance.

Understanding Carbohydrates and Insulin

Carbohydrates are the nutrient that has the biggest effect on your blood sugar. They're found in foods like rice, bread, ground provisions, fruit, and anything with added sugar. When you eat carbohydrates, your blood sugar rises — and if you take mealtime insulin, the dose is based on how much carbohydrate you're about to eat. Counting carbs as closely as you can helps you match your insulin dose to your meal, rather than guessing.

Insulin needs change as pregnancy progresses, and they typically increase from around 20 weeks onward as hormone levels rise. A dose that works well early in pregnancy will likely need adjusting later. This adjustment should always be made together with your care team — not on your own, and not based on this guide alone.

Step 1 — Know Your Target Carb Ranges

These are general starting ranges. Your doctor may set different targets for you.

  • Breakfast 30-45 g
  • Lunch 45-60 g
  • Dinner 45-60 g
  • Snacks 15-20 g

Step 2 — Estimate the Carbs in Your Meal

Use the table below as a rough reference for common food portions, then add up the carbs across everything on your plate. Note that these values will vary based on your portion size.

Food Serving Carbs
Rice, cooked 1 cup 45g
Whole wheat bread 2 slices 30g
Sada roti 1 small 35g
Dhalpuri roti 1 medium 50g
Buss-up-shot 1 serving 50g
Sweet potato 1 medium 25g
Dasheen 1/2 cup 25g
Cassava 1/2 cup 25g
Corn 6-8inch cob 20g
Channa (chickpeas) 1/2 cup 20g
Lentils, cooked 1/2 cup 20g
Apple 1 small 15g
Orange 1 medium 15g
Banana 1 small 23g
Mango, diced 1 cup 25g
Watermelon, diced 1 cup 12g

Portion sizes are averages and can vary. If a food comes with a nutrition label, use the "Total Carbohydrate" value listed on the package instead.

Step 3 — Calculate Your Mealtime Insulin Dose

Divide the grams of carbohydrate in your meal by your ICR — the insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio your doctor has given you.

Go to calculator

Step 4 — Correcting a High Blood Sugar After a Meal

If your 1-hour post-meal reading is above your target — commonly 140 mg/dL, but confirm your own target with your doctor — a correction dose may be needed. This is calculated using your ISF, the insulin sensitivity factor your doctor has given you.

Go to calculator

Dose calculator

Only use ICR/ISF values your doctor has given you.

Pre-meal dose

Pre-meal dose

Correction dose

Correction dose

Only use ICR/ISF values your doctor has given you.