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Healthy Eating, a Balanced Diet and Body Image
Nutrition and Health Healthy Eating, a Balanced Diet and Body Image The material covered in this PowerPoint provides a good introduction to Nutrition and Health. It focuses on the issues of healthy eating, a balanced diet, body image, obesity and eating disorders. This PowerPoint could be used to introduce CoPE Module 7: Healthy Eating and links well to challenges 2 and 9. Teachers could use the information and issues covered on the following slides as a starting point for research projects, discussions or oral presentations. For example, in relation to BMI and weight to height ratio, students could collect data as part of a survey to work out BMI, calculate the average BMI of their class and use ICT to create graphs or charts to show their findings. Ref: Orb/0912/000370
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A healthy diet: the basics
Healthy diets are balanced in the context of: Proteins: build muscles and cells Carbohydrates (starch and sugars): energy Fats and oils: cell membranes and energy Vitamins and minerals: health Fibre: helps food move through the body Water: hydration of the body Orb/0912/000370
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The five food groups Proteins: meat, eggs, fish and alternatives
Carbohydrates: potatoes, rice, pasta, bread and alternatives Fruit and vegetables: fresh, frozen and tinned all count towards your five a day Dairy: milk, cheese, yoghurt and alternatives Fatty and sugary foods: chocolate, sweets, oil, butter, crisps, chips Orb/0912/000370
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You should eat more of some foods and less of others
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What is malnutrition? Orb/0912/000370
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Health and body image What factors influence how we see ourselves?
Advertising? Models, film stars or famous people? Popular music culture? Who are most vulnerable to images of so-called ‘desirable’ body shape and size? Orb/0912/000370
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What do you think? As a group, discuss the factors that influence body image. How might this affect teenagers and young people? Orb/0912/000370
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Anorexia A physiological disease Orb/0912/000370
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Lack of food causes health problems
Deficiencies, such as: Scurvy: lack of vitamin C Anaemia: lack of iron Starvation causes: Reduced resistance to disease Irregular periods in women Orb/0912/000370
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Obesity How would you describe an obese person?
Where does being overweight stop and obesity start? Orb/0912/000370
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Obesity is also malnutrition
However, it can be linked to a person’s genes. Some families are more likely to become overweight without dietary control – particularly when linked with poor exercise routine. Orb/0912/000370
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The effects of obesity Too much food and too little exercise can cause obesity and other health problems: Arthritis: worn joints Diabetes: high blood sugar level High blood pressure Heart and blood vessel disease (cardiovascular) Orb/0912/000370
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It’s a matter of balance
To maintain your weight: Does a bricklayer need to eat more than a teacher? Do Eskimos need to eat more high-energy foods than us? Energy intake (from food) Energy output (exercise) Orb/0912/000370
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Height to weight ratio lalal Orb/0912/000370
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Body Mass Index (BMI) BMI Weight (kg) Height2 (m2)
Doctors can assess whether people are obese using BMI – however it is not totally reliable. To calculate your BMI: <18.5 underweight normal weight overweight 30+ obese BMI Weight (kg) Height2 (m2) Orb/0912/000370
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Fast foods High in fats and salt Not good for you if eaten to excess
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Dieting There are lots of different types of diets: Weight Watchers
Slim Fast Atkins F-plan G.I diet and many more… Orb/0912/000370
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