1 / 31

The Irish Diet Today We are what we eat Marian Faughnan

The Irish Diet Today We are what we eat Marian Faughnan. Recent newspaper headlines. “The 42in-waist school uniform has arrived” Irish Examiner 28/8/07. “Kids ‘lucky to have pack of chewing gum’ for school lunch” Irish Independent 6/9/07.

mercury
Download Presentation

The Irish Diet Today We are what we eat Marian Faughnan

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. The Irish Diet Today We are what we eat Marian Faughnan

  2. Recent newspaper headlines “The 42in-waist school uniform has arrived” Irish Examiner 28/8/07 “Kids ‘lucky to have pack of chewing gum’ for school lunch” Irish Independent 6/9/07 “Parents to blame for the surge in childhood obesity” Sunday Independent 2/9/07

  3. Prevalence of adult obesity Europe Source; IOTF, 2003

  4. Childhood Obesity & Adult Health • Obese (age) 3-5 4 x risk adult obesity • Obese (age) 10-14 30 x risk adult obesity Estimated increased risk for the obese Women Men Type 2 Diabetes 12.7 5.2 Hypertension 4.2 2.6 Myocardial Infarction 3.2 1.5 Cancer of the Colon 2.7 3.0 Angina 1.8 1.8 Gall Bladder diseases 1.8 1.8 Ovarian Cancer 1.7 - Osteoarthritis 1.4 1.9 Stroke 1.3 1.3 Source: National Audit Office

  5. Dietary Guidelines

  6. Evidence of what we eat • North South Ireland Food Consumption Survey 1998/9 • National Children’s Survey 2003/4 • National Teenage Study 2006 – data under analysis • National Survey of Lifestyles, Attitudes and Nutrition 1998 and 2002 • Health Behaviour in School-aged Children 2002 and 2006

  7. Cereals, breads and potatoes • Too few wholegrain varieties (fibre) • Bread - mostly white • Breakfast cereals • Eaten by 95% boys and 91% girls • important for vitamins & minerals • Only 11% people knew that they should be eating lots of starchy foods (FSA, 2007)

  8. Fruits and Vegetables • Adults • Average intake 3 portions a day • Only 1 in 5 people eating 5-a-day • Children (5-12y) • ½ portion of vegetables/d • 2 portions/d mostly from fruit juice • Only 1/3rd people know tinned and dried fruit count towards 5-a-day (FSA, 2007)

  9. Milk, Cheese and Yoghurts • Adults • Most milk - full-fat • Low calcium intakes versus high saturated fat intakes • Intakes of these foods associated with meals • Children (5-12y) • Most milk - full-fat • 28% boys and 37% girls have low calcium intakes

  10. Meat, fish and alternatives • Adults 98% population meat consumers Main sources of salt and fat in the diet – processed meats contributing 66% consume fish • Children Processed meat main source 45g/d compared to lean fresh cuts 25g/d Meat dishes an important source – 37g Fish intake very low 9g/d – 47% consuming fish

  11. Confectionary, snacks, biscuits and beverages • A major contributor to calorie intake Children • Displacing more nutritious foods in the diet • Consume almost twice what the recommendation • Most drinks contain added sugar

  12. Current dietary habits

  13. Regular Meals • Long periods of fasting linked to poor appetite control • Skipping breakfast a common practice • 14% teenagers never have breakfast during weekdays

  14. Food eaten outside of the home • Meals prepared and eaten outside of the home are higher in fat • Eating occasions outside of home peak at weekend • Only account for 6% eating occasions for 5-12 year olds (NCS, 2005)

  15. In under 12’s home environment is key

  16. Early learning – life long habits Research has shown that • Varied diet associated with a healthier diet • Parents who avoid new foods are more likely to have children who are fussy about food • Family meals - healthier diets in children • Meals prepared from raw ingredients - healthy diet vs Ready-made meals and take-away meal - less healthy diet

  17. >2 hrs TV viewing associated with body weight More unhealthy foods advertised than healthy foods

  18. Food Poverty • Socially disadvantaged groups • Eat less well • Spend relatively more on food • Have difficulties accessing food • Know what is healthy • Unable to have social meals

  19. Healthy Food For All Initiative • AIMS • Support community initiatives • Develop an all-Ireland learning network • Promote awareness of food poverty • Multi-agency initiative • safefood a founding member • www.healthyfoodforall.com

  20. Community initiatives • Education programmes • Community food gardens • Fresh fruit in schools • Breakfast clubs • Community food co-op

  21. Pupil Power Killylea Primary School

  22. Healthier options in retail outlets Brown/wholemeal bread Low fat cheese Low fat spread/mayonnaise Suppliers key to change HSE – Midlands Health Board

  23. safefood’s SUPERFOODS Campaign 3 key messages to be focused on • Eat more fruits and vegetables • Choose more wholegrain foods • Choose leaner cuts of meat Target – Parents/guardians and young children

  24. Pea

  25. Current Phase – Engage with families in 60 supermarkets Team including qualified nutritionist and superfood character

  26. Thankyou

More Related