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Nutrition: A Balancing Act. Food Choices We have food choices every day. Do we pick the sandwich with fries or do we have the salad? Do we have a candy.

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Presentation on theme: "Nutrition: A Balancing Act. Food Choices We have food choices every day. Do we pick the sandwich with fries or do we have the salad? Do we have a candy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nutrition: A Balancing Act

2 Food Choices We have food choices every day. Do we pick the sandwich with fries or do we have the salad? Do we have a candy bar or a granola bar? Some choices are easy. But what about the decision between two “healthy” foods?

3 Or Sometimes what we think is healthy is actually not as good for us as we think. This McDonalds Southwestern Salad with Grilled Chicken and a package of ranch dressing has 490 calories. Four McNuggets and small fries has 420!

4 Of course that is only looking at calories. To decide between these two items we would want to take other things into account. Fat Content Salad/Dressing = 24 grams (37%) Nuggets/Fries = 23 grams (35%)

5 Sodium (Salt) Salad/Dressing = 1490 mg Nuggets/Fries = 590 mg Protein Salad/Dressing = 12 grams Nuggets/Fries = 31 grams Fiber Salad/Dressing = 6 grams Nuggets/Fries = 3 grams

6 Vitamin A Salad/Dressing = 130% Nuggets/Fries = 2% Carbohydrates Salad/Dressing = 40 grams (13%) Nuggets/Fries = 40 grams

7 How Do These Diets Measure Up? How would you rate the diets of some teens from California and Rhode Island? #1 Here's a typical day's food choices in the life of Ryan Shaw, 15, from Coventry (Rhode Island) High School: Breakfast: Bagel with cream cheese Lunch: French fries, fruit juice Dinner: Kentucky Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, coleslaw, milk Ryan's diet is high in fat and lacks adequate dairy and protein --two major groups for supplying calcium, vitamin D, and protein necessary for building strong bones and body structure and boosting our immune system.

8 Rianne's diet is missing fresh fruits and vegetables-important groups for essential vitamins, minerals, antioxidants. (Important for fighting off diseases) #2 Rianne Short, 14, from Gospel Light High School in San Diego, eats: Breakfast: Honey Nut Cheerios, 1% milk Lunch: Bologna sandwich, banana bread, olives, fruit yogurt, lollipop, apple juice Dinner: Homemade chicken and noodle soup, garlic bread, milk, small chocolate bar

9 Christine's diet: No breakfast. It's just too long for the brain and body to go without food from dinner until that snack at 11:00 the next day. The body “drags” without a “jump start” in the morning. #3 Christine Marsden, the 15-year-old from Thousand Oaks, typically eats: Breakfast: nothing 11:00 Snack: Pretzels Lunch: Popcorn, fruit yogurt, juice, apple 3:00 Snack: Cereal, 2% milk Dinner: Steak, mashed potatoes, salad with Italian dressing, fruit roll-up, juice

10 Ethan's diet is high in sugar and fat and low in fiber. Occasional treats are OK but a steady diet of them means skimping on important nutrients elsewhere. Ethan Bjork, 16, a junior at Newbury High School in Thousand Oaks, California, typically eats: Breakfast: Toast with butter and jelly, milk, Twinkles, coffee with sugar and creamer Lunch: Sandwich, chips, apple, cookies Dinner: Bean and cheese burrito, iced tea with sugar, chips


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