1 / 47

An Overview of Nutrition

An Overview of Nutrition. Chapter 1. Chapter 1 Objectives. Describe how various factors influence personal food choices. Name the six classes of nutrients Identify which are organic. Identify a major use of each nutrient.

jeneva
Download Presentation

An Overview of Nutrition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Overview of Nutrition Chapter 1

  2. Chapter 1 Objectives • Describe how various factors influence personal food choices. • Name the six classes of nutrients • Identify which are organic. • Identify a major use of each nutrient. • Identify which provide energy and calculate the energy available from foods. • Explain the scientific method. • Explain the role of nutritional genomics in the science of nutrition. • List the strengths and weaknesses of research designs. • Define the four categories of the DRI (EAR, RDA, AI, UL) and explain their purposes. • Explain how the EER is used to maintain energy balance. • Discuss the AMDR and how they relate to a healthy diet. • Use the DRI to assess a healthy individual. • Explain how the four assessment methods are used to detect energy and nutrient deficiencies and excesses. • List the four parts of a nutritional assessment and apply them to individuals to detect malnutrition. • List the major methods used to survey the nutritional status of populations. • Identify several risk factors and explain their relationships to chronic diseases. • Recognize misinformation and describe how to identify reliable nutrition information. • Identify accurate sources of nutrition information. • List the 8 red flags that identify nutrition misinformation.

  3. Introduction • Daily food choices • Benefit health • Harm health • Chronic disease • Diet = what we eat • Foods and beverages

  4. Food Choices • Choices are highly personal • Complex interaction of genetic, social and behavioral motives • Personal preference = #1 • Taste: sugar, salt, fat • Genetics, hormones • Ethnic or regional heritage and tradition • Habit

  5. Food Choices • Social interactions • Availability, convenience, and economy • Benefits of home-cooked meals • Positive and negative associations • Emotions • Boredom, depression, anxiety, stress

  6. Food Choices • Values • Religious beliefs, political views, environmental concerns • Body weight and image • Nutrition and health benefits • Functional foods = foods that provide health benefits beyond their nutrient contributions • Examples: tomato (lycopene), orange juice (calcium), margarine (sterols)

  7. The Nutrients • Water • Inorganic • No energy • Minerals • Simplest nutrient • Inorganic • No energy • Vitamins • Organic • No Energy • Carbohydrates • Organic • Energy • Proteins • Organic • Contains nitrogen • Energy • Lipids/Fats • Organic • Energy

  8. Elements in the Six Classes of Nutrients

  9. Energy-Yielding Nutrients • Amount of energy in food • Depends on composition • Using nutrients for energy • Breaking of bonds • Storage of excess energy • Metabolism • Materials for building body tissues • Regulation of bodily activities

  10. Energy-Yielding Nutrients • Provide kcalories • Carbohydrate = 4 kcal/g • Protein = 4 kcal/g • Fat = 9 kcal/g • Alcohol • Not a nutrient • Yields energy = 7 kcal/g • Macronutrients vs. micronutrients

  11. The Vitamins • Thirteen organic vitamins • Water-soluble vitamins • Fat-soluble vitamins • Facilitate energy release • Almost every bodily action requires assistance from vitamins • Vulnerable to destruction • Heat (vit C), light (riboflavin)

  12. The Minerals & Water • Minerals • Do not yield energy • Sixteen essential minerals • Indestructible • Causes of mineral losses from foods • Bound and unable to be absorbed (phytates), leach into water (sodium) • Water • Medium for nearly all body activities

  13. The Science of Nutrition • Foundation in several other sciences • Biology, biochemistry, physiology • Tremendous growth • Sequencing of human genome • Nutritional genomics: nutrient-gene-disease

  14. Conducting Research • Use of scientific method • Systematic process for conducting research • Research studies • Controls • Randomization • Sample size • Placebos • Double-blind experiments

  15. OBSERVATION & QUESTION Identify a problem to be solved or ask a specific question to be answered. HYPOTHESIS & PREDICTION Formulate a hypothesis—a tentative solution to the problem or answer to the question—and make a prediction that can be tested. EXPERIMENT Design a study and conduct the research to collect relevant data. RESULTS & INTERPRETATIONS Summarize, analyze, and interpret the data; draw conclusions. HYPOTHESIS SUPPORTED HYPOTHESIS NOT SUPPORTED THEORY NEW OBSERVATIONS & QUESTIONS Develop a theory that integrates conclusions with those from numerous other studies. Stepped Art Figure 1-3 p13

  16. Conducting Research • Epidemiological studies: incidence, distribution, control of disease in pop. • Cross-sectional studies • Case-control studies • Cohort studies • Experimental studies: cause-and-effect relationships • Laboratory-based animal studies • Laboratory-base in vitro studies • Clinical trials

  17. Examples of Research Designs Fig. 1-4 (pg 14)

  18. Examples of Research Designs Fig. 1-4 (pg 14)

  19. Analyzing Research Findings • Correlations – only show association • Positive correlation • Not necessarily a desired outcome • Negative correlation • No correlation • Cautious interpretations and conclusions • Accumulation of evidence

  20. Publishing Research • Peer review • Research has validity • Findings are preliminary when published • Not meaningful by themselves • Findings need to be replicated

  21. Parts of a Research Article

  22. Dietary Reference Intakes • Standards defined for: • Energy • Nutrients • Physical activity • Collaborative effort of U.S. and Canada • Recommendations apply to healthy people • May be different for specific groups

  23. Dietary Reference Intakes • Estimated Average Requirements (EAR) • Average amount sufficient for half of population • Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) • Recommendations to meet needs of most healthy people • About 98% of population

  24. EAR and RDA Compared

  25. Dietary Reference Intakes • Adequate Intakes (AI) • Insufficient scientific evidence • AI value set instead of RDA • Expected to exceed average requirements • Tolerable Upper Intake Levels (UL) • Point where nutrient is likely to be toxic • Helps protect against overconsumption

  26. Inaccurate vs. Accurate View of Nutrient Intakes

  27. Dietary Reference Intakes • Estimated Energy Requirement (EER) • Average dietary energy intake to maintain energy balance • Healthy body weight • Physical activity • No upper level

  28. Dietary Reference Intakes • Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Ranges (AMDR) • Adequate energy and nutrients • Reduce risk of chronic diseases • Range • 45-65% kcalories from carbohydrate • 20-35% kcalories from fat • 10-35% kcalories from protein

  29. Dietary Reference Intakes • Estimates apply to healthy people • Needed adjustments • Recommendations – not minimum levels nor optimal levels • Goals intended to be met through diet • Apply to average daily intakes • Each DRI category serves a unique purpose

  30. Nutrition Assessment – Individual Level • Deficiency or excess over time leads to malnutrition • Undernutrition and overnutrition • Symptoms of malnutrition • Diarrhea • Skin rashes • Fatigue • Others

  31. Nutrition Assessment – Individual Level • Creating a “total picture” of the individual • Historical information • Health status, SES, drug use • Diet history – intake over several days; portion sizes; computer analysis • Anthropometric measurements • Height and weight – track to identify trends • Physical examinations • Laboratory tests

  32. Stages in the Development of a Nutrient Deficiency

  33. Nutrition Assessment – Population Level • National nutrition surveys • National nutrition monitoring program • Coordinates two major national surveys • Oversample high-risk groups • National health goals • Healthy People • National trends

  34. Healthy People 2020 Nutrition & Weight Status Objectives

  35. Healthy People 2020 Nutrition & Weight Status Objectives

  36. Diet and Health • Food plays vital role in supporting health • Chronic disease – epidemic levels • Multiple factors over multiple years • Leading causes of death

  37. Diet and Health • Risk factors • Persist over time • Cluster • Prominence of risk factors • Tobacco • Diet & activity patterns • Others

  38. Nutrition Information & Misinformation Highlight 1

  39. Nutrition Information & Misinformation • Validity of information • Who is providing information? • Qualifications • Internet • Anyone can publish anything • No guarantees of accuracy • Evaluate websites • Who, When, Where, Why, and What?

  40. Nutrition Information & Misinformation • News • Often tell lopsided story • Testimonials • Tight deadlines • Limited understanding • Current and controversial

  41. Nutrition Information & Misinformation • Identifying nutrition experts • Physicians & other health-care professionals • Training in nutrition is limited • Registered Dietitian (RD) • Degree and clinical internship • National exam • Maintain up-to-date knowledge • Dietetic Technician Registered (DTR)

  42. Nutrition Information & Misinformation • Identifying fake credentials • Accreditation • Diploma mills • Fraudulent businesses • Red flags of nutrition quackery • Misinformation

  43. Nutrition Information & Misinformation

More Related