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Diet requirements for different client groups

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Title: Diet requirements for different client groups


1
Diet requirements for different client groups
  • Sally Ison
  • Senior Community Dietitian

2
Learning Outcomes
  • Be aware that there is a range of different
    client groups
  • Identify different characteristics of different
    client groups
  • Knowledge of different components in different
    foods
  • Identify other factors that will affect their
    product choice

3
Some Client Groups..
  • Maternal
  • Babies and toddlers
  • Primary school children
  • Adolescents
  • Adults
  • Older people
  • Vegetarians
  • Coeliac
  • Diabetics
  • Food intolerant

4
Nutrition through Life Cycle
5
Pregnancy
  • Provide sufficient calories to support weight
    gain
  • Provide all essential nutrients
  • 400ug/day folic acid
  • Fibre 25 35 g/day
  • Iron
  • Increase fluid intake

6
Pregnancy
  • Lifestyle changes alcohol, smoking, caffeine
  • Salt to taste
  • Vitamin A
  • Vitamin D
  • Calcium

7
Breast Feeding
8
Formula Feeding
  • Some Mums choose not to or are unable to breast
    feed
  • Formula Milks
  • Using human milk as the nutritional standard,
    formula manufacturers follow a basic recipe that
    includes proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins,
    minerals and water

9
Formula Milk
10
Child and Preadolescent Nutrition
  • Children continue to grow and develop physically,
    cognitively and emotionally during the middle
    childhood and preadolescent years
  • Children continue to develop eating and physical
    activity behaviors that affect their current and
    future states of health
  • Childrens families continue to exert the most
    influence over their eating and physical activity
    habits

11
Child and Preadolescent Nutrition
  • External influences
  • Teachers
  • Coaches
  • Peers
  • Media
  • Independence

12
Dietary Recommendations
  • Iron inclusion of iron-rich foods including
    meats, fortified breakfast cereals, and dry beans
    ( vitamin C for absorption)
  • Fibre Age 5 grams per day may prevent
    adulthood disease fresh fruit and veg whole
    grain breads and cereals
  • Fat Use high fat esp saturated fat sparingly
    fat intakes lt20 are not recommended for
    children need calories, EFA, FSV

13
Dietary Recommendations
  • Calcium 800mg 4-8 yrs 1300mg 9-18 yrs bone
    formation prevention of osteoporosis low-fat
    dairy products
  • Fluids esp. during exercise
  • Soft drinks increased consumption with age
    overweight children

14
Products
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Adolescents
  • Biological, psychosocial and cognitive changes
    affect nutritional status
  • Rapid growth increases nutrient needs
  • Desire for independence may cause adoption of
    health-compromising eating behaviours

17
Adolescents
  • Common belief that the adolescent diet is
    nutritionally inadequate is this true?
  • Getting taller!
  • Getting heavier!
  • Energy surplus Reduced Activity
  • Micronutrient deficiency?

18
Adults
  • Early 21-39 yrs
  • Midlife 40-59 yrs
  • Old age 60 yrs
  • Need to develop beneficial nutritional and
    lifestyle choices to support physical and mental
    health and well-being in old age

19
Adults
  • Growth and maturation are complete by early
    adulthood
  • Focus now on maintaining physical status,
    strength and avoidance of excessive weight gain
  • Reduce fat intake to 30 or less limit saturated
    fats to less than 10 limit cholesterol to 300
    mg daily

20
Adults
  • 5 or more serving of vegetables and fruits per
    day
  • Maintain moderate protein intake
  • Balance food intake and physical activity to
    maintain normal weight
  • Limit salt intake less than 6 grams

21
Adults
  • Limit alcohol intake less than 2-3 units per day
    for women 3-4 for men with 2-3 alcohol free days
    in the week
  • Maintain adequate calcium
  • Avoid taking vitamin and mineral supplements in
    excess of RDA

22
Elderly
  • Main age related body changes
  • Decrease in muscle mass
  • Slower uptake of vitamin A
  • Decline in immune function
  • Reduced skin synthesis of vitamin D
  • Decreased vitamin B6 utilisation
  • Decreased absorption of certain vitamins and
    minerals
  • Recommendations for specific nutrients change
    with age

23
Elderly
  • Some nutrients are of particular importance in
    older adults e.g fibre, protein, saturated fat,
    vitamin D, vitamin B12, vitamin A, Iron, vitamin
    E, folate, calcium, magnesium and zinc

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25
Vegetarian and Vegans
  • In general vegetarians have a well balanced diet
  • Lower mortality from some chronic diseases
  • Vegetarians are more likely to be health
    conscious and alter other aspects of their diet
    and lifestyle

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Coeliac
  • Coeliacs Disease is a reaction to gluten, which
    causes damage to the lining of the small
    intestine, thereby reducing an individuals
    ability to absorb enough nutrients for their
    needs. Gluten is found in wheat and some other
    cereals
  • 250,000 diagnosed with coeliac disease in UK
  • 500,000 undiagnosed in UK

28
Coeliac
  • The Gluten Free Food and Drink Directory ("The
    Food List")

29
Diabetics
  • Diabetes mellitus is a condition in which the
    amount of glucose (sugar) in the blood is too
    high because the body cannot use it properly
  • Type 1 diabetes develops if the body is unable to
    produce any insulin
  • Type 2 diabetes develops when the body can still
    make some insulin, but not enough, or when the
    insulin that is produced does not work effectively

30
Diabetics
  • The diet for people with diabetes is a balanced
    healthy diet, the same kind that is recommended
    for the rest of the population
  • low in fat, sugar and salt
  • plenty of fruit and vegetables
  • meals based on starchy foods, such as bread,
    potatoes, cereals, pasta and rice

31
Food intolerance
  • Food allergy and food intolerance are both types
    of food sensitivity
  • Food intolerance doesnt involve the immune
    system and is generally not life-threatening. But
    if someone eats a food they are intolerant to,
    this could make them feel ill or affect their
    long-term health
  • Essential to examine the label on any pre-packed
    food

32
Labeling Rules
  • Peanuts
  • nuts such as almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, Brazil
    nuts, cashews, pecans, pistachios and macadamia
    nuts
  • Eggs
  • Milk
  • Crustaceans (including prawns, crabs and
    lobsters)
  • Fish
  • sesame seeds
  • cereals containing gluten (including wheat, rye,
    barley and oats)
  • soya
  • celery
  • mustard
  • sulphur dioxide and sulphites (preservatives used
    in some foods and drinks) at levels above 10mg
    per kg or per litre

33
Components of food in human diet
  • Carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Fats
  • Minerals
  • Vitamins
  • Water
  • Roughage

34
Important Note
  • You should target your product to a particular
    client group bearing in mind their specific
    dietary requirements

35
Carbohydrates
  • C carbo   H2O hydrate
  • Basic formula (CH2O)n
  • All carbohydrates are converted to glucose and
    absorbed into the blood
  • Glucose - vital fuel n 6  C6 H12 O6

36
Carbohydrates
  • Chemically carbohydrates are defined by the
    number of saccharide units in their structure
  • Monosaccharides
  • Disaccharides
  • Oligosaccharides
  • Polysaccharides

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Dietary Carbohydrates
  • Originate from plants CO2 H2O
    Photosynthesis
  • Living animals have carbohydrates but this
    dissipates rapidly on death
  • Not all carbohydrates are digestible
  • 1 gram of carbohydrate 4 kcal
  • Starches and sugars are main sources of dietary
    carbohydrate

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41
Dietary sugars
  • Intrinsic sugars those present within intact
    cells e.g. Sugars in fruit
  • Non-milk extrinsic sugars present in a free and
    readily absorbable state e.g. sucrose

42
Requirement and intake
  • Total carbohydrate should provide 50 energy
  • Non-milk extrinsic sugars should not exceed 11
    energy intake
  • Starches, intrinsic and milk sugars should
    contribute to 39 energy intake

43
Sources of dietary Carbohydrates
Starches
Intrinsic Sugars
Milk Sugars
NMES
44
Restriction of Carbohydrate intake
  • Atkins Diet
  • Low carbohydrate
  • Ketongenesis
  • GI diet
  • The glycaemic effect of 50g of a particular food
    in relation to 50g glucose
  • Encourages low GI foods

45
Protein
  • Protein amino acidamino acidamino acidamino
    acid
  • Made of 20 different amino acids bonded together
    in different sequences to form many SPECIFIC
    proteins
  • Twenty amino acids are important in nutrition

46
Amino Acid
  • Side chain of an amino acid determines its
    properties (R group)
  • The carbon to which the carboxyl is attached is
    the alpha-carbon
  • Amino acids have 4 different groups around the
    alpha carbon resulting in optically active L or D
    isomers or enantiomers

47
Amino Acid
  • L-forms proteins and biological systems
  • D-forms bacteria (not mammals)
  • D-forms slowly absorbed in digestion
  • Amino acids can be positively or negatively
    charged according to the pH of the environment
  • The polarity of the amino acid indicates how the
    amino acid will be incorporated into proteins

48
Classification of amino acids
  • Essential amino acid
  • One that the body is unable to make or can only
    make in inadequate quantities
  • Need to be consumed from the diet
  • 8-10 essential amino acids
  • Nonessential amino acid
  • One that the body can make in large enough
    quantities
  • Made from essential amino acids
  • Not necessary to consume these in the diet
  • 10-12 nonessential amino acids

49
Structure of amino acid
  • Different side chains make different amino acids

50
Amino Acids
  • Essential (10)
  • Phenylalanine
  • Valine
  • Threonine
  • Tryptophan
  • Isoleucine
  • Methionine
  • Histidine
  • Arginine
  • Leucine
  • Lysine
  • Nonessential (10)
  • Alanine
  • Asparagine
  • Aspartic acid
  • Cysteine
  • Glutaminc acid
  • Gluatmine
  • Glycine
  • Proline
  • Serine
  • Tyrosine
  • Conditionally essential (3)
  • Cysteine
  • Glutamine
  • Tyrosine

51
Primary structure of a protein
  • It is the sequence of amino acids that makes each
    protein different from the next
  • Dipeptide 2 amino acids
  • Tripeptide 3 amino acids
  • Polypeptide many amino acids
  • Most proteins have many 100 amino acids

aa
aa
aa
aa
aa
aa
Peptide Bonds
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Secondary structure
  • Alignment of polypeptides as a right-hand alpha
    helix
  • Stabilized by hydrogen bonds between carboxyl
    (CO) and imido (NH) groups

54
Tertiary structure
  • Three dimensional folding and coiling of
    polypeptide into globular 3-D structure
  • Caused by additional chemical interactions among
    side chains
  • Disulfide bonds

55
Quaternary structure
  • Interactive folding of several polypeptide chains
    together to form a single functional protein
  • Functional proteins also might incorporate
    minerals or other nonprotein components
  • Final shape and components determine function of
    protein

56
Nutritional importance of proteins
  • Nutritional value of dietary proteins is
    determined mainly by its primary structure (i.e.
    amino acid composition)
  • Tertiary structure can influence protein
    digestibility
  • Globular proteins are generally more easily
    digested than filamentous proteins such as
    collagen, elastin and keratin

57
Protein synthesis and amino acids
  • Protein synthesis cannot proceed without an
    adequate supply of all amino acids, which
    contribute to the primary structure of that
    protein

58
Amino acids and protein quality
  • The ability of a specific dietary protein to
    supply amino acids in the relative amounts
    required for protein synthesis by body tissues is
    defined as biological value
  • Influenced mainly by essential amino acid
    composition
  • Is not fixed, but varies with the needs of
    different species, physiological and nutritional
    states

59
Biological functions of proteins
  • Principal organic chemical constituents of body
    organs and soft tissues
  • Enormous functional diversity
  • Cell membrane structure and function
  • Enzymes
  • Hormones and other chemical messengers
  • Immune factors (antibodies)
  • Fluid balance
  • Acid-base balance
  • Transport
  • Source of energy and glucose

60
Structural and mechanical
  • Collagen
  • Bone and skin
  • Keratin
  • Hair and nails
  • Motor proteins
  • Make muscles work!

61
Enzymes
  • Proteins that catalyze (speed up) chemical
    reactions without being used up or destroyed in
    the process
  • Anabolic (putting things together) and catabolic
    (breaking things down) functions
  • Example
  • Digestion
  • Salivary amylase

62
Hormones
  • Chemical messengers that are made in one part of
    the body but act on cells in other parts of the
    body
  • Note that "steroid hormones" are not proteins!
  • Examples
  • Insulin
  • CCK
  • Some reproductive hormones

63
Immune function (antibodies)
  • Antibodies are proteins that attack and
    inactivate bacteria and viruses that cause
    infection

64
Fluid balance
  • Proteins in the blood help maintain appropriate
    fluid levels in the vascular system
  • Fluid is forced into tissue spaces by blood
    pressure generated by pumping action of the heart
  • Fluid returns to blood because of osmotic
    pressure

65
Transport proteins
  • Transport substances in the blood
  • Lipoproteins (transport lipids)
  • Hemoglobin (transports oxygen and carbon dioxide)
  • Transport materials across cell membranes

66
Source of energy
  • Proteins are the last to be used for energy!
  • Occurs in starvation and low carbohydrate diets
  • When excess protein occurs
  • Some amino acids converted to glucose which is
    converted to fat

67
Sources of Protein
68
Fats
  • Distributed universally among all cells of the
    body
  • Fuel for cells
  • Essential fatty acids
  • Carrier of fat soluble vitamins
  • Protective layer around organs
  • Cell membranes
  • Hormone synthesis

69
Fat and fatty acids
Triacylglycerols
Glycoglycerolipids
Waxes
Sterols
Phospholipids
Sphingolipids
70
Dietary fats
  • High energy component 9 kcal per gram
  • Most important contain 16-18 carbons
  • Saturated
  • Monounsaturated
  • Polyunsaturated

Depends on location of the double bond
71
Fatty acids
Carboxyl group
Saturated
Unsaturated
Cis
Methyl Group
Trans
Polyunsaturated
72
Saturated fatty acids
  • Only single bonds
  • High melting temperature
  • Solid at room temperature
  • Chemically stable
  • Animal fats and their products
  • May enhance arthrosclerosis and cardiovascular
    disease

73
Monounsaturated fatty acids
  • Contain one double bond
  • Usually liquid at room temperature
  • Olive oil
  • Rapeseed oil
  • Nuts
  • Seeds
  • Most beneficial type of fatty acid
  • Lower LDL cholesterol
  • Less lipid peroxidation than PUFA

74
Polyunsaturated fatty acids
  • Contain 2 or more double bonds
  • Liquid at room temperature
  • Susceptible to oxidation
  • Omega 3 and 6

75
Polyunsaturated fatty acids
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Brain development
  • Eyes

76
Trans Fatty acids
  • Double bonds may be cis or trans
  • Cis both on same side
  • Trans facing each other
  • Most naturally occurring dietary fat is cis
  • Processed margarines contain significant amounts
    of trans
  • Same adverse affects as SFA

77
Cholesterol
  • Wax like substance
  • Belongs to steroid family
  • Cholesterol is essential to life required for
    synthesis of bile acids, steroid hormones and
    vitamin D

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Dietary fat requirements
  • Total fat - lt35
  • SFA lt11
  • MUFA 13
  • N-6 PUFA 6.5
  • N-3 PUFA 0.2g/day (minimum)
  • Trans Fats - lt2
  • May need higher intakes of n-3

80
Sources of fat
81
Low or reduced fat foods
  • Reduced fat at least 25 less fat than the
    standard product
  • Low fat food lt3 fat/100g or 100ml
  • Fat free lt0.15g fat/100g or 100ml

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Vitamins
  • Vitamins are essential nutrients in the
    maintenance of normal health and metabolic
    integrity
  • Obtained from food because your body can't make
    them from scratch (organic compounds)
  • You need only small amounts (micronutrients)
    because the body uses them without breaking them
    down, unlike what happens to carbohydrates and
    other macronutrients

84
Vitamins
  • 13 compounds have been classified as vitamins
  • Vitamins A, D, E, and K, the four fat-soluble
    vitamins, tend to accumulate in the body
  • Vitamin C and the eight B vitamins-biotin,
    folate, niacin, pantothenic acid, riboflavin,
    thiamin, vitamin B6, and vitamin B12-dissolve in
    water, so excess amounts are excreted and these
    are thus known as water-soluble

85
VitaminsThe "letter" vitamins sometimes go by
different names. These include
  • Vitamin A retinol, retinaldehyde, retinoic acid
    (preformed) and carotenoids (provitamin A)
  • Vitamin B1 thiaminVitamin B2
    riboflavinVitamin B6 pyridoxine, pyridoxal,
    pyridoxamineVitamin B12 cobalamin
  • Vitamin C ascorbic acid
  • Vitamin D calciferol
  • Vitamin E tocopherol, tocotrienol
  • Vitamin K phylloquinone

86
Vitamin A
  • Growth
  • Vision
  • Regulation of gene expression
  • Tissue differentiation

87
Vitamin D
  • Calcium absorption
  • Gene expression
  • Bone health
  • Healthy immune system

88
Vitamin E
  • Antioxidant
  • vegetables oils, nuts, seeds, most green leafy
    vegetables and a variety of fish

Vitamin K
  • Blood clotting
  • green leafy vegetables, soya bean, rapeseed,
    cottonseed and olive oils

89
Vitamin C
  • Antioxidant
  • Prevents scurvy
  • Iron absorption

90
B Vitamins
  • B1 thiamin required for the central nervous
    system (beri beri)
  • B2 riboflavin energy
  • B6 coenzyme protein metabolism and steroid
    hormone regulation
  • B12 pernicious anaemia

91
B vitamins
92
Minerals
  • Essential minerals
  • calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, iron, zinc,
    fluoride, iodine, selenium, copper, manganese,
    chromium, molybdenum, sodium, potassium, chloride

93
Minerals
  • Calcium bone health dairy products
  • Zinc immune system fish, meat, rice
  • Iron blood, energy meat, fish, cereals
  • Sodium and chloride regulation of osmotic and
    electolyte balance - salt

94
Water
  • Adults are 60-70 water
  • Recommended intakes
  • 12 cups/day for males
  • 9 cups/day for females
  • 75 from fluids 25 from foods
  • Dietary sources
  • Best are water and nonalcoholic beverages
  • Alcoholic beverages increase water loss through
    urine

95
Examples - discussion
  • What nutrition do they provide?
  • What age group(s) are targeted?
  • Male or female or both?
  • Anyone excluded?

96
RYVITA
97
Wholemeal Rye, Salt.CONTAINS Gluten, may
contain traces of sesame seeds      Made from
only natural ingredients      No artificial
colourings or preservatives      Only 28
Calories per slice      High in fibre     
Low in fat
98
Quorn Fillet (69)rehydrated free range egg
white, onion, textured wheat protein (wheat
protein, wheat starch), flavourings, milk
proteins, tapioca starch, gelling agent
pectin, breadcrumb (wheat flour, yeast, salt),
batter (maize flour, wheat flour, wheat starch,
hydrogenated palm oil, raising agents di-sodium
diphosphate, sodium bicarbonate salt, skimmed
milk powder, dextrose, whey powder, wheat
gluten, rice flour, rapeseed oil), sunflower
oil. Contains Egg, Gluten, Milk Wheat
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Actimel
  • Nutritional information Typical values per
    100gEnergy kJ (kcal) 349/83
  • Protein 2.8g
  • Carbohydrate 14.3gFat 1.6g
  • Contains milk
  • Suitable for vegetarians and coeliacs

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Crisps
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