to these guidelines, several general rules advise you to
Balance your calorie intake with energy output in the form of regular exercise. Check out Chapter 5 for specifics on how many calories a person of your weight, height, and level of activity (couch potato? marathon runner?) needs to consume each day.
Make foods with complex carbohydrates and dietary fiber (defined in Chapter 8) the base of your total daily calories. These should make up to 900 to 1,300 calories and up to 25 grams dietary fiber on a 2,000 calorie per day diet.
Concentrate on unsaturated fats. For more specific guidelines, check out Chapters 16 and 17 and Chapter 7 for everything you need to know about the individual dietary fats.
Drink alcohol only in moderation. That means one drink a day for a woman and two for a man. As the Guidelines note, neither is a component of the USDA Dietary Patterns.
Different people, different needs
Because different bodies require different amounts of nutrients, RDAs currently address as many as 22 specific categories of human beings: boys and girls, men and women, from infancy through middle age. In 2006, the RDAs were expanded to include recommendations for groups of people age 50 to 70 and 71 and older.
These expanded groupings are a really good idea. In 1990, the U.S. Census counted 31.1 million Americans older than 65. By 2050, the U.S. government expects more than 60 million mostly active older citizens.
If age is important, so is gender. For example, because women of child-bearing age lose iron when they menstruate, their RDA for iron is higher than the RDA for men. On the other hand, because men who are sexually active lose zinc through their ejaculations, the zinc RDA for men is higher than the zinc RDA for women.
And gender affects body composition, which influences other RDAs, such as protein: The RDA for protein is set in terms of grams of protein per kilogram (2.2 pounds) of body weight. Because the average man weighs more than the average woman, his RDA for protein is higher than hers. The RDA for an adult male, age 19 or older, is 56 grams; for a woman, it’s 46 grams.
SEVEN RULES FOR LADIES-IN-WAITING
The 2020 edition of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans is the first one in which the scientific advisory committees chose to focus on how what a pregnant woman eats affects the health of her developing baby. Here’s their advice based on what they found:
1 Women of child-bearing age should be encouraged to achieve and maintain a healthy weight before becoming pregnant and during pregnancy itself. (For more on healthful weight, check out Chapter 4.)
2 When picking a dietary pattern, aim for one rich in fruits and veggies, whole grains, seafood, and vegetable oils while cutting back on added sugars, refined grains, and red and processed meats. (More on that in Chapter 17.)
3 Choose plant foods that are good sources of important vitamins such as folate and minerals such as calcium.
4 Don’t worry about allergens unless it’s the mother’s allergy. What a pregnant woman eats does not appear to create allergies in the baby.
5 Include at least 8 ounces and as much as 12 ounces of seafood once a week. Aim for seafood low in mercury and high in protective omega-3 fatty acids.
6 No alcohol. Period.
7 Stay away from chancy, possibly contaminated foods such as unpasteurized milk and undercooked meats.
AIs: The Nutritional Numbers Formerly Known as ESADDIs
In addition to the RDAs, the Food and Nutrition Board has created an Adequate Intake (AI) for eight nutrients considered necessary for good health, even though nobody really knows exactly how much your body needs. Not to worry: Sooner or later, some smart nutrition researcher will come up with a hard number and move the nutrient to the RDA list.
You can find the AIs for biotin, choline, and pantothenic acid in Chapter 10, along with the requirements for other vitamins. The AIs for the minerals calcium, chromium, molybdenum, and manganese are in Chapter 11 with the other dietary minerals.
DRI: The Totally Complete Nutrition Guide
In 1993, the Food and Nutrition Board’s Dietary Reference Intakes committee set up several panels of experts to review the RDAs and other recommendations for major nutrients (vitamins, minerals, and other food components) in light of new research and nutrition information. The first order of business was to establish a new standard for nutrient recommendations called the Dietary Reference Intake (DRI). DRI is an umbrella term that embraces several categories of nutritional measurements for vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients. It includes
Estimated Average Requirement (EAR): The amount that meets the nutritional needs of half the people in any one group (such as teenage girls or people older than 70). Nutritionists use the EAR to figure out whether an entire population’s normal diet provides adequate amounts of nutrients.
Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA): The RDA, now based on information provided by the EAR, is still a daily average that meets the needs of 97 percent of a specific population, such as women age 18 to 50 or men age 70 and older.
Adequate Intake (AI): The AI is a new measurement, providing recommendations for nutrients for which no RDA is set. (Note: AI replaces ESADDI.)
Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL): The UL is the highest amount of a nutrient you can consume each day without risking an adverse effect.
The DRI panel’s first report, listing new recommendations for calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and fluoride, appeared in 1997. Its most notable change was upping the recommended amount of calcium from 800 milligrams to 1,000 milligrams for adults age 31 to 50 as well as postmenopausal women taking estrogen supplements; for postmenopausal women not taking estrogen, the recommendation is 1,500 milligrams.
The DRI panel’s second report appeared in 1998. The report included new recommendations for thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B6, folate, vitamin B12, pantothenic acid, biotin, and choline. The most important revision was increasing the folate recommendation to 400 micrograms a day based on evidence showing that folate reduces a woman’s risk of giving birth to a baby with spinal cord defects and lowers the risk of heart disease for men and women. (See the sidebar “Reviewing terms used to describe nutrient recommendations” in this chapter to brush up on your metric abbreviations.)
As a result of the 1998 DRI panel’s report, the FDA ordered food manufacturers to add folate to flour, rice, and other grain products. (Multivitamin products already contain 400 micrograms of folate.) In May 1999, data released by the Framingham Heart Study, which has followed heart health among residents of a Boston suburb for nearly half a century, showed a dramatic increase in blood levels of folate. Before the fortification of foods, 22 percent of the study participants had folate deficiencies; after the fortification, the number fell to 2 percent.
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