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What is nutrition? ✔✔Nutrition by definition is the science that links foods to health and disease. When is nutrition important? ✔✔from conception to death When considering one's health, five dimensions can be evaluated: physical health, intellectual health, emotional health, social health, and spiritual health. ✔✔physical health - body's ability to perform daily functions for survival
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What is nutrition? ✔✔Nutrition by definition is the science that links foods to health and disease. When is nutrition important? ✔✔from conception to death When considering one's health, five dimensions can be evaluated: physical health, intellectual health, emotional health, social health, and spiritual health. ✔✔physical health - body's ability to perform daily functions for survival intellectual health - the cognitive ability to learn and adapt emotional health - the ability to express or suppress emotion social health - ability to interact with others spiritual health - purpose for human existence, cultural practices What is the difference between food and nutrients? ✔✔Food provides energy in terms of calories, while nutrients are substances found in food that provide the materials for building and maintaining our bodies and regulating of key metabolic processes that sustain life. What two motives drive people to eat certain foods? (it isn't nutritional value) ✔✔taste and texture
Nutrients ✔✔substances in food Why do we get hungry? ✔✔1) hunger 2) appetite hunger ✔✔internal drive often experienced as a negative sensation such as churning, growling, or a painful sensation in the stomach appetite ✔✔external drive often related to pleasant sensations associated with food and can lead us to eat even if we are not hungry satiety ✔✔the feeling of being full hypothalamus ✔✔a region of the brain that plays a role in hunger as well the feeling of being full gastrointestinal tract (GI) ✔✔the main site in the body used for digestion and absorption of nutrients stomach ✔✔plays a major role in satiety and weight regulation (expands as it starts to fill with food adding to the feeling of satiety)
factors have a strong influence on what we eat. Much of this is learned from parents and influenced by peers. In addition, time is limited for many of us, and the food industry has responded by providing many convenient options for consumers. Supermarkets now provide many options for time-pressed consumers in the form of microwavable meals and snacks, prepackaged vegetables, quick prep frozen products, and home-style meals. Nutritional value: Individual choices can be determined by stage in the life cycle, health status, educational background, and social status. Nutrition information provided on food labels can aid consumers who are trying to make environmental ✔✔Economics: This plays a major role in our food choices. Families with higher incomes typically spend more money on meals eaten away from home. The types of food purchased are often affected by income. Lifestyle: Nuclear family, single-parent household, single-career women, and elderly individuals all have different lifestyles. Time, convenience, and income influence our lifestyles and food choices. Cultural/religious beliefs: Culture defines our attitudes, and it is the strongest influence on food preferences. Food may have a symbolic meaning related to family traditions, social status, experience, customs, and health. The culture in which we are raised has a major impact on what foods we prefer. In all cultures, eating is a primary way of maintaining social relationships. Environment: For many of us a weekly trip to the supermarket is taken for granted. However, people who live in very rural or inner-city areas may not have a grocery store near. In this instance, choices become very limited, and it is difficult to purchase fresh fruit and vegetables as
micronutrient ✔✔needed in small amounts in the body organic ✔✔a compound that contains carbon and hydrogen inorganic ✔✔any substance that does not contain carbon carbohydrates ✔✔-compound of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
minerals ✔✔- simple, inorganic substances
percentage of calories that should come from fats ✔✔ 20 - 35% nutrient-dense foods ✔✔foods containing high amounts of vitamins and minerals that our bodies use as fuel empty-calorie foods ✔✔contain a lot of calories but have little to no nutrient value A person's nutritional status can be classified into one of three categories: ✔✔(1) desirable nutrition, (2) overnutrition, or (3) undernutrition. Desirable nutrition ✔✔is achieved by eating a variety of foods that provide all the essential nutrients to support normal body functions. A balanced diet and regular exercise can help reduce the risk of chronic disease. Overnutrition ✔✔is the excess consumption of calories, fats, saturated fats, and cholesterol, which increase the risks of chronic disease. In the United States, overconsumption often results in obesity. In some instances, an overconsumption of some nutrients may be toxic to the body. Undernutrition ✔✔occurs when nutrient intake does not meet the nutrient needs of the body. As nutrient levels decline over time, the body's metabolic processes begin to slow (or even stop) and can cause a decline in one's health. Subclinical deficiency describes this initial phase where
deficiency of a nutrient is sufficient to begin to affect one's health and yet is not yet severe enough to cause outward symptoms. If left untreated and the deficiency continues, outward symptoms eventually occur and a diagnosis can be made. malnutrition ✔✔a collective term that can refer to either overnutrition or undernutrition. Although it is most often associated with undernutrition, malnutrition ultimately relates to the ill- effects of an unbalanced diet, which stems from the inadequate or overabundant intake of one or more nutrients. These are known as the ABCDE's of nutritional assessment. ✔✔- Anthropometric assessment: measurements of body composition, including weight, height, skin fold measurements, and body circumference
Structure/function Claims ✔✔These claims are not FDA approved. An example of this type of claim is: "Product X contains bee pollen, which may lower your stress level". There does not have to be any scientific evidence to back up the claim, nor does it have to be valid. The FDA will only regulate these claims if the product may cause harm to the consumer.