Citizen's Comfort

Eat Healthy; Live Healthy Part 2

Consumption of less than 5g salt per day could prevent 1.7 million deaths each year. —WHO

The food we eat will either help our body to fight disturbing diseases or feed the diseases to fight our body. Good diets improve immunity, while poor diets worsen it. Last week we highlighted how we can eat healthy in order to live healthy. It was an eye opener. Balanced diets, we noted, are actually not expensive, not complex, nor complicated and not cumbersome.

It is true that the food we eat provides our body the macro and micro nutrients necessary for healthy living, however eating patterns, characteristics and habits have the capacity to jeopardize health. For example, some disorderly eating patterns like binge, anorexia and bulimia are eating habits that are not only anathemas to good health, they oftentimes have grave health consequences.

The food that we eat provide our body with the required calories for survival. The number of calories in a food is the amount of energy stored in that food. Our body uses calories from food for walking, thinking, breathing, and for other important functions. However, poor eating habits may negate all food health advantages to our body.

Medical experts say average person needs about 2,000 calories every day to maintain weight, but the amount, again, depends on age, sex, and physical activity level. According to the experts, males tend to need more calories than females, and people who exercise need more calories than people who don’t. (See table for calorie intakes for males and females of different ages& activities). Healthy meals guarantee the right calories. Nutritious meals with appropriate protein, carbohydrate, vitamins, minerals, and healthy fats, balance calories- in with calories- out.

Person Calorie requirements
Sedentary children: 2–8 years 1,000–1,400
Active children: 2–8 years 1,000–2,000
Females: 9–13 years 1,400–2,200
Males: 9–13 years 1,600–2,600
Active females: 14–30 years 2,400
Sedentary females: 14–30 years 1,800–2,000
Active males: 14–30 years 2,800–3,200
Sedentary males: 14–30 years 2,000–2,600
Active people: 30 years and over 2,000–3,000
Sedentary people: 30 years and over 1,600–2,400

 

Just as the health benefits of healthy food are overwhelming, so also are the health problems of unhealthy food burdensome. Dieticians and nutritionists say moderation in calories intake is key. According to experts, eating too few calories for a prolonged period of time causes a person to become underweight leading to muscle atrophy, weakened immunity, and eventually, organ failure. And conversely, eating too many calories causes a person to become overweight then obese, increasing their chances of heart disease, type II diabetes, cancer, high cholesterol in the blood, stroke and other life-threatening ailments.

A balanced diet that balances calories will include a variety of foods from the following groups: fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy, protein foods (meat, egg, fish, beans and nuts)

Food is natured design to give optimal health value to life. But when food is applied wrongly, it jeopardizes the life. Wrong application of food results to health complications including obesity, diabetes, cholesterol problems, heart problems, stroke, cancers and some other noncommunicable diseases.

Healthy dietary practices start early in life – breastfeeding fosters healthy growth and improves cognitive development, and may have longer term health benefits such as reducing the risk of becoming overweight or obese and developing noncommunicable diseases later in life.

As we have noted, balanced diet is not expensive, it’s the poor eating habits that is expensive. Uncontrollable craving for fatty food is expensive, craving for highly processed food is expensive, craving for sweetened foods is expensive, love for saturated fat is expensive, love for high fat dairy products is expensive, over eating and under eating are all expensive habits to poor health.

How to eat right

– Don’t skip any meal. Skipping meals lowers your metabolic rate.

– Don’t skip breakfast. It is the foremost vital meal of the day.

– Don’t ignore water.

– Don’t drink too much alcohol.

– Don’t sabotage yourself with sugar.

– Don’t serve super-sized portions.

– Don’t Starve Yourself

– Don’t eat after being fill up

– Don’t eat late at night

– Don’t Eat if You’re Not Hungry

– Don’t Eat Too Much Saturated Fat

– Don’t forget exercise.

– Don’t eat while you watch TV, work, drive.

– Don’t forbid yourself a particular food.

– Don’t beat yourself up when you lapse.

– Don’t weigh yourself more than once per week.

– Don’t eat high sugar food

– Don’t eat high salt food

– Don’t eat too much egg yoke.

These and many more are ways and means we can, as individuals, families and societies alter our eating habits to get more health values from the food we eat. Like the words of wisdom say “If you give bad food to your stomach, it drums for you to dance”. You must eat right!

 Global Perspective

With global figures in obesity rising among infants and children, World health Organization (WHO) not long ago, set up the Commission on Ending Childhood Obesity, to successfully tackle childhood and adolescent obesity in different contexts, including reduction of salt/sodium intake and elimination of industrially-produced trans-fats from the food supply.

According to WHO, consuming a healthy diet throughout the life-course helps to prevent malnutrition in all its forms as well as a range of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and conditions. However, increased production of processed foods, rapid urbanization and changing lifestyles have led to a shift in dietary patterns. People are now consuming more unhealthy foods; foods high in energy, fats, free sugars and salt/sodium, and many people do not eat enough fruit, vegetables and other dietary fibre such as whole grains.

The exact make-up of a diversified, balanced and healthy diet, according to WHO varies depending on individual characteristics (age, gender, lifestyle and degree of physical activity), cultural context, locally available foods and dietary customs. Adding that the basic principles of what constitutes a healthy diet remain the same.

WHO HEALTHY DIET

Adults

 Infants and young children

In the first 2 years of a child’s life, optimal nutrition fosters healthy growth and improves cognitive development. It also reduces the risk of becoming overweight or obese and developing NCDs later in life.

Practical advice on maintaining a healthy diet

Fruit and vegetables

Eating at least 400 g, or five portions, of fruit and vegetables per day reduces the risk of noncommunicable diseases and helps to ensure an adequate daily intake of dietary fibre.

Fruit and vegetable intake can be improved by:

Fats

Reducing the amount of total fat intake to less than 30% of total energy intake helps to prevent unhealthy weight gain in the adult population. Also, the risk of developing NCDs is lowered by:

Fat intake, especially saturated fat and industrially-produced trans-fat intake, can be reduced by:

Salt, sodium and potassium

Most people consume too much sodium through salt (corresponding to consuming an average of 9–12 g of salt per day) and not enough potassium (less than 3.5 g). High sodium intake and insufficient potassium intake contribute to high blood pressure, which in turn increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.

Reducing salt intake to the recommended level of less than 5 g per day could prevent 1.7 million deaths each year.

People are often unaware of the amount of salt they consume. In many countries, most salt comes from processed foods (ready meals; processed meats such as bacon, ham and salami; cheese; and salty snacks) or from foods consumed frequently in large amounts (bread). Salt is also added to foods during cooking (bouillon, stock cubes, soy sauce and fish sauce) or at the point of consumption (table salt).

Salt intake can be reduced by:

Some food manufacturers are reformulating recipes to reduce the sodium content of their products, and people should be encouraged to check nutrition labels to see how much sodium is in a product before purchasing or consuming it.

Potassium can mitigate the negative effects of elevated sodium consumption on blood pressure. Intake of potassium can be increased by consuming fresh fruit and vegetables.

Sugars

In both adults and children, the intake of free sugars should be reduced to less than 10% of total energy intake.  A reduction to less than 5% of total energy intake would provide additional health benefits.

Consuming free sugars pose dental challenges (tooth decay). Excess calories from foods and drinks high in free sugars also contribute to unhealthy weight gain, which can lead to overweight and obesity. Recent evidence, according to WHO reports, shows that free sugars influence blood pressure and serum lipids, and suggests that a reduction in free sugars intake reduces risk factors for cardiovascular diseases.

Sugar’s intake can be reduced by:

How to promote healthy diets

Promoting a healthy food environment – including food systems that promote a diversified, balanced and healthy diet – requires the involvement of multiple sectors and stakeholders, including government, and the public and private sectors.

According to WHO, governments have a central role in creating a healthy food environment that enables people to adopt and maintain healthy dietary practices. WHO encourages policy-makers to create a healthy food environment through:

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