Assessing Nutrition Data For Truth And Relevance

By Shelly Murdock


There is no lack of nutrition data available to those who want to learn about health. Federal guidelines for a balanced diet and labels on every food product sold in the United States provide information. For more information, or for alternative views, there are too many nutritional guides and online sites to assimilate.

If you are a beginner to this study, read the federal guidelines for a basic, conventional view of foods that promote health. There will be minimum daily requirements for vitamins and minerals; an ideal calorie allotment geared to age, height, and activity level; a standard for protein, carbohydrate, and fiber intake.

One complication is that not everyone is the same. Food that sustains one person might give another an allergy attack or gastric distress. Regularity might be usual for one person, who needs little fiber, while another might struggle for proper elimination no matter how much whole food is consumed.

If a person has a sensitivity or an allergy to certain foods, they will probably be unable to absorb nutrients from that food. In fact, a severe case can mean that a person can eat a lot but actually suffer from malnutrition. Some processed food has too much sodium, an overload of preservatives, artificial flavors and colors, and are loaded with fat or sugar.

It is important to know what is in your food, where it comes from, and how fresh it is. Vitamins may break down over long periods of shipping or of sitting on a shelf, and minerals can be lost during preparation - such as in canned vegetables or soups. Fresh local produce may be a better choice, but it is still important to know how it was grown and prepared for market.

You will find experts - many of them medical doctors - who advocate lots of good fat, almost no fat at all, complex carbohydrates as the basic food group, low-carb and high-protein diets, fruit only, vegetables only, or who say that you can eat anything you want if you exercise enough. The trick is to find out what works for you, create a program that builds health and fosters ideal weight, and stick to it.

The best thing you can do is to find reputable sources of nutrition data, experiment with the advice, and see what works best for you. It is important to decide on a balanced diet that gives you all the nutrients you need from foods that work with your digestive system and metabolism. Don't be discouraged; the subject is interesting and it is possible to find your way through the maze.




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