Diet
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A balanced diet is a diet that contains all the essential nutrients in the correct proportions and right quantities needed to maintain health, growth, and development.
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A balanced diet must include:
- enough energy (provided by carbohydrates, fats, and proteins)
- essential amino acids from proteins
- essential fatty acids from fats
- micronutrients (vitamins and minerals)
- water to replace water lost in urine, sweat, breath and feces
- fibre for moving food from the mouth to the anus along the gut.
- If eaten in the correct proportions, these components make up a balanced diet which is a healthy diet.
Principal dietary sources and importance
Carbohydrates
- From rice, pasta, bread, potatoes, cereals.
- Primary source of energy. Broken down during respiration to release energy for cellular processes.
Fats and oils
- From butter, cheese, vegetable oils, nuts, fatty fish, meat.
- Long-term energy storage, thermal insulation and making cell membranes.
Proteins
- From meat, fish, eggs, beans, pulses, tofu, dairy.
- Growth and tisue repair. Essential for manufacturing enzymes, anttibodies, and certain hormones.
Vitamin C
- From citrus fruits (e.g. oranges, lemons), strawberries, green vegetables.
- Essential for maintaining healthy skin and gums, critical for collagen production and wound healing.
Vitamin D
- From oily fish, eggs, liver, dairy products, sunlight.
- Needed for the absorption of calcium in the small intestine to build strong bones and teeth.
Calcium and iron
- Calcium comes from milk, cheese, yogurt, green leafy vegetables (e.g. broccoli).
- Calcium is essential for structural strength of bones and teeth, muscle contraction, and blood clotting.
- Iron comes from red meat, liver, spinach, egg yolks, dark chocolate.
- Iron is an essential component of hemoglobin in red blood cells, which binds and transports oxygen around the body.
Fibre (roughage)
- From wholemeal bread, brown rice, oats, fruit, vegetable skins.
- Adds bulk to food in the alimentary canal, providing muscles with something to push against to stimulate peristalsis and prevent constipation.
Water
- From drinking water, juices, milk, water-rich fruits (e.g. melon, tomatoes).
- Acts as a solvent for metabolic/chemical reactions, serves as a transport medium (plasma, urine) and aids in temperature regulation (sweating).
Nutrient deficiency diseases
Scurvy
- Scurvy is caused by a severe deficiency of Vitamin C.
- Key symptoms of scurvy are:
- severe joint pain
- bleeding gums
- loose teeth
- wounds that fail to heal properly because of the breakdown of collagen fibers.
Rickets
- Rickets is caused by a severe deficiency of Vitamin D.
- Key symptoms of rickets are:
- soft, weak bones that bend or bow outward under the body’s weight that lead to skeletal deformities
- dental problems
Portion sizes
- Fruit and vegetables: 5 portions per day
- Starchy carbs: 3-4 portions per day
- Beans, pulses, fish, eggs, meat, and other proteins: 2-3 portions per day
- Dairy and alternatives: 2-3 portions per day