Your Diet, Your Health
Nutrition is essential not only for life, but for a healthy
life. Learn about the connection between what you eat and how you feel.
We've all heard the old saying “you are what you eat.” And
it's still true. If you stick to a healthy diet full of vitamins and minerals,
your body reflects it. You feel healthy, energized, and just all-around great.
However, people who limit their diet to junk foods will undoubtedly suffer the
consequences of not giving their bodies what they need to thrive. The result is
not only fatigue and low energy, but poor health as well. Understanding this
clear connection between your health and your diet may spur you to make better
dietary choices.
Your Diet and Your
Health: What Your Body Needs
"Food is essential. People take it for granted, but we
need nutrients," says Anne Wolf, RD, a researcher at the University of
Virginia School of Medicine. Wolf cites as one example the old days when
sailors crossed the ocean for months without proper nutrition. As a result,
they ended up with scurvy because of a lack of vitamin C from citrus fruits.
Vitamin C and other vitamins and minerals are necessary to keep all the
different parts of the body healthy and functioning — otherwise, we get sick.
Every little thing that you do happens because of the
nutrients that you give your body. Says Wolf, "Food gives us the fuel to
think and the energy to move our muscles. The micronutrients, the vitamins, the
minerals are there so that our bodies can function. You need food not just to
sustain health, but to feel better."
And the only way the body will get the many nutrients needed
to stay healthy and function is by eating a wide variety of healthy foods.
Your Diet and Your
Health: The Guidelines
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's food pyramid and the
daily food recommendations were established after extensive research and
continue to be updated as more is learned about the role of nutrition in good
health. Their goal is to make sure that people understand all the different
nutrients their bodies need to stay healthy.
Food went from being a necessity to simply function to being
the key to enabling the body to be at its functional best, says Wolf. Research
shows that the right nutrition optimizes health and that getting enough of
certain vitamins and minerals can also lower disease risk.
Your Diet and Your
Health: Poor Diet, Poor Health
Many foods have a huge impact on heart health. Research has
long shown that fruits and vegetables and a diet rich in whole grains and low
in saturated fats can help protect the body from heart disease and high blood
pressure, while a diet high in saturated and trans fats without enough fruits
and vegetables can actually cause those diseases.
Even small diet deficiencies can have an enormously negative
impact on your health. The most common health problem due to a lack of
nutrients in the United States is iron deficiency, says Wolf. Menstruating
women and girls need plenty of iron in their diets to replace what they lose
each month during their periods. Iron is also an essential nutrient for
infants, children, and growing teens.
Another example is calcium, needed to keep bones strong and
healthy, says Wolf. Without it, the body can develop osteoporosis, a health
condition characterized by weak and brittle bones.
Eating a well-rounded and varied diet will go a long way
toward making sure you have all the nutrients you need. Remember that our body
uses everything we put into it, and what we give it determines how it's used —
for good health, or for bad.
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