Saturday, January 6, 2007

Eating More or Less of Particular Nutrients

In terms of nutrients, it is known from several surveys from the MAFF, and from various studies by the NHS, that the foods which people usually eat on average tend to be closer towards fast food, or ready meals, most of which do not provide a balanced meal, and contribute to major nutrient deficiencies.

From this, people should be able, from governmental guidelines, to decide what amounts of nutrients they have in their diets and increase or decline intakes accordingly. However, people don't eat foods and not nutrients, and few people know which foods stock which nutrients, so allowing people to self-regulate their diets means that they run the obvious risk of deficiency.

However, even with pamphlets and other media, the values of which nutrients come from which foods, and the effect of foods on a diet is a difficult decision. For instance, milk, cheese, and other dairy products are known to have a relatively high fat content, and it would be thought that those things with high fat content should be removed from a healthy diet. However, when looking at the food, the more important factor is whether the food has an overall good effect on the diet. For instance, removing such dairy products from a healthy diet may lower fat intake, but will also have implication on the intakes of calcium and riboflavin that such foods possess.
Fears of high cholesterol were frequently voiced up until the mid-1990s. However, more recent research has shown that the distinction between high- and low-density lipoprotein ('good' and 'bad' cholesterol, respectively) must be addressed when speaking of the potential ill effects of cholesterol. Low density lipoprotein is often prevalent in animal products, such as bacon and egg yolks, whereas high density lipoprotein is more common in plant and fish tissues, such as olive oil and salmon.

Due to the difficulties of educating people about nutrient intake in the past, governments have opted to move towards instructions for what foods to eat rather than what nutrients to ingest.

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