Showing posts with label Implications for Public Health Policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Implications for Public Health Policy. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

How Nutrition Can Effect Our Behavior

How Nutrition Can Effect Our Behavior
The disciplines of nutrition and behavior are not usually
considered to be closely related, but there are infact several key
areas of overlap between these fields. Behavior factors determine the
choice of foods in the diet, and any attempt to change dietary patterns
must necessarily involve the central nervous system and may be
associated with mood changes.



That diet influences behavior is an ancient human belief. Primitive
people attributed friendly and unfriendly feelings to plants and
animals and expected these feelings to be transferred to anyone who ate
such foods. In religious teachings, the behavior of mankind was said to
change instantly when Eve ate the apple. Solomon, suffering the pangs
of love, was confronted with apples. The ancient Greeks proposed that
the body is composed of four "humors" - hot, cold, wet, and dry - that
control health, feelings, and behavior. Such ideas have carried forth
to the present day, when many cultures believe in hot/cold or yin/yang
approaches to food and health.



Systematic study of cultural influences on food intake began early
in this century as anthropologists examined the use of food in isolated
cultures and ethnic groups. Even in contemporary times, foods are
endowed with magical powers and are believed to symbolize feelings such
as those of satisfaction and security.



The reduction of behavioral risk factors for chronic disease, an
improvement of the food choices and dietary practices of individuals,
and the development of effective means to do so is the key to diet and
good health.

Behavioral determinants and aspects of eating disorders



Although infants do not begin life with a choice of foods, some of
the most obvious reflexes at birth are those associated with eating.
Infants learn to associate eating with security and relief from
anxiety, tension, and distress. Later, children eat in conformance to
cultural and familial standards. These ingrained meanings attached to
the roles of food in society suggest reasons that food habits can be
changed only with difficulty.



Although the choice of certain foods as opposed to others may
greatly affect nutritional status, food selection includes multiple
environmental, cultural, genetic, social, and sensory variables that
interact in complex ways. One exception appears to be an innate
preference for foods that are sweet. This preference is acquired in
early childhood and continues throughout life.



Selection of foods for nutritional or health reasons is a learned
behavior. Infants have not been shown to have an inborn ability to
select a balanced, nutritious diet. Variety of foods available has an
important effect on food consumption; the more the available foods are
varied, the more of them people will eat.



Behavior change is a key element in reducing the risk for chronic
disease. Eating behaviors are acquired over a lifetime, to change them
requires alterations in habits that must be continued permanently -
beyond any short-term period of intervention.



Dietary advice is often restrictive and viewed as depriving or
unpleasant. It may also be incompatible with cultural or familial
standards. Furthermore, environmental factors such as peer pressure,
advertising of high-calorie foods and alcoholic beverages may strongly
counteract recommended changes.



Despite these difficulties, considerable evidence supports the
effectiveness of nutrition education in changing dietary intake to
reduce risk factors for conditions such as coronary heart disease,
diabetes, hypertension, and neurologic disorders.



Obesity



Obesity is the excessive accumulation of fat in the body. The cause of obesity is quite simple - fat accumulates when more calories are consumed than are expended.



Obesity is often a familial disorder, obese parents tend to produce
obese offspring. Obesity is more common among women than among men, and
its prevalence increases with age but decreases among individuals of
higher socioeconomic status and greater levels of physical activity.



Once obesity is established, food choices and caloric intake are no
longer normal, and personality differences between obese and
normal-weight individuals may be due to results of physiologic changes,
social discrimination, or dieting.



Disparagement of body image affects a larger percentage of obese
persons than nonobese persons who characteristically dislike their own
bodies. Such feelings are closely associated with self-consciousness
and impaired social functioning.



Although weight reduction ought to confer great benefits upon obese
persons and be simple to accomplish, clinical experience has shown
obesity to be remarkably resistant to treatment. The basis of weight
reduction is deceptively simple: Establish an energy deficit by
consuming fewer calories than are expended or expending more calories
than are consumed. Most such treatment is carried out under the
direction of nonmedical groups and counsellors in programs that pose
some hazard and are of uncertain long-term effectiveness.



Treatment measures should be specified and outcomes evaluated;
treatment should be individualized; and treatment effectiveness should
be assessed. Behavioral weight control programs usually include group
participation at weekly meetings for periods of two months or more, and
involve techniques of stimulus control, eating behavior, reward,
self-monitoring, nutrition education and physical activity.



Obese patients who participate in regular peer group meetings
following the completion of formal treatment maintain their weight loss
better than those who do not participate in such meetings.



It is important to make a note about obesity and the numerous
"weight loss formulas" that are currently marketed. These products
range from diet pills to drinks that supposedly will make weight loss
happen without any other dietary changes.



There is not a single, safe formula available that will cause
permanent weight loss without any adverse effects on the health of the
user. The proof of this is the fact that irrespective of the amount of
products that come and go, obesity still exists among about one third
of the population - millions of people. If there was one product that
was successful, obesity would no longer be a problem and the "inventor"
of this product would probably be the richest person in the world.



Do not take any "formula" for weight loss, you are wasting your
time, money, and probably health by doing so. Rather, follow the
dietary guidelines found in this book to achieve a desirable weight and
healthy lifestyle.



Anorexia Nervosa



Anorexia nervosa is a condition characterized by extreme weight
loss, amenorrhoea, and a constellation of psychologic problems that
have been described as "the relentless pursuit of thinness". [Bruch, H., Eating disorders: obesity, anorexia nervosa and the person within. New York. 1979.]



The most common cause of the disease is a single episode with full
recovery, but anorexia nervosa can be episodic or unremitting until it
causes death by starvation.



Unlike many other psychiatric disorders, anorexia nervosa tends to
occur in intact families and is often precipitated by seemingly minor
events during adolescence. Most theories of anorexia nervosa focus on
psychologic trauma or unempathetic and overly domineering mothering as
underlying causes of the disease. Socio-cultural theories suggest that
the disease represents an exaggeration of the current inordinate weight
consciousness of adolescent girls at a time when high-calorie foods are
readily available and fewer calories are expended through exercise.



Typical symptoms of the disease include depression and
obsessive-compulsive behaviors, it is not clear if these psychiatric
problems preceded weight loss or occur as a result of semistarvation.
Depression is often the first visible sign of anorexia nervosa.
Abnormal hormonal patterns characteristic of starvation also occur.



The clinical features of anorexia nervosa are personality
characteristics such as rigidity or perfectionism, fear of obesity
preceding the onset of the disorder, and the symptoms of starvation
accompanying it. Serious body image disturbance is common, manifested
by a lack of recognition of the severe emaciation and a belief that one
is too fat. Individuals are often preoccupied with food, thinking about
it much of the time, and often engaging in bizarre eating rituals. Many
anorectics engage in very extensive physical exercise. The disorder is
also associated with a pervasive sense of personal ineffectiveness.



Anorectics are divided into two types, "restricters" who confine
their eating disorder to restricted food intake, and "bulimics" who
engage in bingeing and subsequent vomiting and purging. Bulimic
anorectics tend to be older, manifest other impulsive behaviors such as
kleptomania, alcohol and drug abuse, and sexual promiscuity.



Anoretics deny their weight-losing behaviors and the existence of
any illness and avoid treatment even when they have become severely
emaciated. Family members often have to insist on medical treatment.
Some anoretic persons effectively hide their weight-losing behaviors
even after they are forced to seek medical assistance.



Most persons with anorexia are resistant to entering treatment
because of their fear of weight gain and are usually brought, by family
members, under protest. Because starvation plays a significant role in
the clinical portrayal of anorexia nervosa, clinicians begin treatment
with a period in hospital designed to restore body weight. Such
treatment that removes the patient from the environment may permit the
use of behavioral rewards for weight gain and provides the opportunity
to work on issues of control. Some medications have been helpful in the
treatment of anorexia nervosa. These include cyproheptadine (an
appetite stimulant), chlorpromazine (sedative, used in the treatment of
psychotic conditions), and antidepressant medication.



Bulimia



Bulimia is an eating disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of
binge eating in which large amounts of food are consumed over a short
period of time. These episodes are usually terminated by abdominal
pain, self-induced vomiting, sleep, or the appearance of another person
on the scene.



Bulimia occurs among persons of normal weight but is present in half
the patients with anorexia nervosa. The severity of binge eating ranges
from occasional episodes of morbid overeating at a party to the severe
form of the disorder, bulimia nervosa, in which the vomiting or purging
follows frequent episodes of binge eating.



There are many similarities between persons with anorexia nervosa
and bulimia. Both occur primarily in young women, although bulimia
occurs in slightly older individuals, both may relate to the current
preoccupation with thinness and dieting.



The symptoms of depression in the majority of bulimic patients and
the presence of biologic markers of depression suggest that bulimia may
represent a variant of mood disorder. Treatment of bulimia is
cognitive-behavioral and pharmacologic. Behavioral treatment include
modification of the behavioral program designed for obese patients and
a combination of cognitive-behavioral and insight-oriented approaches.



Pica



Pica is the intentional and compulsive consumption of non-food
substances. It occurs worldwide and is common among people of either
sex and of all ages and races. Pica is often associated with
nutritional deficiencies or toxicities, and is of special concern among
young children and pregnant women.



Geophagia is the consumption of earth and clay. Amylophagia is the
consumption of starch and paste, and pagophagia is the eating of ice.
The fourth category includes the consumption of ash, chalk, antacids,
paint chips, plaster, wax, and other substances.



People appear to be driven to consume these substances by
nutritional deficiencies, but pica is not necessarily correlated with
poor nutritional status. The nutritional hazards most frequently
associated with pica are lead poisoning and iron deficiency anaemia.



Hypoglycaemia



Hypoglycaemia (low blood
sugar) can occur either after a fast (fasting hypoglycaemia) or several
hours after the consumption of a meal (reactive hypoglycaemia). Many
individuals have symptoms of weakness, confusion, and irritability
after eating sugars or other carbohydrate foods.



True reactive hypoglycaemia is diagnosed when symptoms of sweating,
tremor, anxiety, and irritability occur at the same time as the
documented low blood sugar level. Such a diagnosis may indicate the
early presence of a disease such as diabetes.



Hyperactive behavior



Hyperactivity is a childhood problem often discussed in relation to
nutrition. This condition is characterized by problems of inattention,
excessive motion, impulsivity, learning disabilities, and related
problems of conduct.



Food additives, especially artificial dyes and colours, can cause hyperactivity.



Implications for Public Health Policy



Studies in patients with eating disorders and other chronic disease
conditions emphasize the importance of modification of diet-related
behavior in these conditions. Although evidence linking dietary
caffeine, refined sugars, and food additives to behavioral disorders is
uncertain, their elimination from thediet will not impair nutritional
status and can be recommended to patients on an individual trial basis.



Nutrition Programs and Services



Food Labels:Evidence related to the role of dietary factors in behavioral disorders holds no implication for food labeling policies.



Food Services:Evidence related to the role of dietary
factors in behavioral disorders holds no special implications for
changes in policies related to food programs beyond the dietary
guidelines suggested by Department of Agriculture and the Department of
Health and Human Services. [The Surgeon General's Report on Nutrition & Health, 1988.]






Information On Aging

Information On Aging
Life expectancy at birth is now 75 years, compared with about
47 years at the beginning of the last century. Although it is not
inevitable, health and mobility often change and decline with advancing
age. The increasing life expectancy observed throughout this century
suggests that diet, exercise, and other personal and socioeconomic
factors can help prolong good health for most people.



Nevertheless, the chances are great that an individual in the eighth
or ninth decade of life will be limited in activity and require health
and social services. Many older people (the general term older will
refer to people over age 65) suffer from arthritis, heart disease,
hypertension, hearing loss, diabetes, obesity, gastrointestinal
conditions, liver disease, cancer, and other chronic diseases. Heart
disease, cancer, and stroke account for over three-quarters of the
deaths among older persons and 50 percent of all days of bed
confinement. Such chronic conditions as well as dementia prevent
functional independence and increase the need for dietary and other
long-term care services.



Until the early 1970's, nutrition services for the older population,
with the exception of food stamps, were based almost exclusively in
hospitals and long-term care facilities. In 1973, in response to the
growing population of older people, to rising health care costs, and to
greater interest in preventive health care, the Nutrition Program for
the Elderly was established under the Administration on Aging to expand
food and nutrition services from the hospital to include communities
and homes.



Aging is accompanied by a variety of physiologic, psychologic,
economic, and social changes that may compromise nutritional status.
Older persons have a prevalence of chronic disease, use medications
heavily, and are relatively sedentary.



Many physiologic functions, including the senses of smell and
possibly taste, decrease with age. These changes may result in
decreased appetite as well as impaired utilization of nutrients and
limitations of function.



Dental problems, common in old age,
decrease the ability to chew certain foods. Physical disabilities such
as diminution of vision may make eating less pleasant. The decreases in
basal metabolic rate and physical activity noted with increasing age
reduce nutrient needs, however, the intake of calories and essential
nutrients may be even lower than these needs. Decreased physical
activity also may predispose individuals to the development of
osteoporosis.



Changes such as osteoarthritis can
affect mobility and decrease an older person's ability to purchase and
prepare food. Another possible hinderance to adequate nutrition in the
aged is malabsorption, which can be caused by decrease or absence of
gastric acid secretion and by interaction with medications commonly
prescribed for older persons.



The most common psychologic factor affecting nutrition is depression.
Of all psychiatric diagnoses, depression is most strongly correlated
with increased mortality, regardless of the age of the subjects, and is
most often related to chronic disease and to poverty, which are common
among older persons. Neither institutionalization nor solitary living
necessarily induces depression, but such life changes may be associated
with poor self-esteem, which in turn, can lead to significant changes
in eating patterns.



Older people as a group have a lower economic status than other
adults. Although the percentage of older individuals living below the
poverty level has decreased substantially over the past two decades and
is now less than the percentage of those under 65 living in poverty,
poverty continues to be too high. The decline in income most often
results from retirement from the workforce, the effects of inflation on
fixed incomes, death of wage-earning spouse, or failing health. Income
and health status have been found to be important determinants of life
satisfaction in the older population. Low income is also a major risk
factor for inadequate nutrition in older individuals.



Most older people do not live in institutions, although
institutional food is likely to meet minimal standards for nutrient
content, factors such as lack of choice or limited day-to-day variety
may increase the risk of inadequate consumption. Many residents of
nursing homes consume a therapeutic diet that may further discourage
adequate intake. An important issue for demented institutionalized
individuals is that they may not consume the food, not that the menu is
inadequate.



Clinical and dietary standards for younger adults may not be
appropriate for older persons, yet few data are available on
nutritional requirements or recommended intakes of older adults. The RDA's
for example, were developed from research on the nutrient needs of
younger healthy people. The present standards for adults over the age
50 are, for the most part, identical to those for people aged 23 to 50.
Because these standards fail to consider the great heterogeneity of
adults whose ages may differ by as much as 50 years and because they
were often not developed from actual measurements on older populations,
their appropriateness for older persons is not known.



Energy and Nutrient Status of the Older Population



The national dietary and food consumption surveys conducted during
the 1970's reported lower energy intakes among older persons than among
younger adults. A study of male executives in the Baltimore
Longitudinal Study of Aging found a steady decline in average energy
expenditure from 2700 kcal per day at age 30 to 2100 kcal per day at 80
years of age. The decline in energy expenditure was attributed to
reduced physical activity and to a decline in basal energy metabolism
as a result of a reduction in lean body mass with age.



Although it is difficult to interpret dietary intake studies of
older persons because of methodological problems, existingstudies
almost always reveal decreases in energy intake with age that may also
be influenced by income, race, food preference, and drug use. A
low-calorie diet may not impair health as long as the nutrient density
of the diet is high and can provide adequate amounts of essential
nutrients. However, this issue has not been examined in great detail
because nutrient requirements in older people remain largely unknown.



Consequently, the increasing level of obesity
among older persons, as indicated by higher weight-for-height with age,
requires explanation. Whether the inconsistency between reported low
energy intake and increasing body weight is due to measurement errors,
inappropriate standards, loss of height with age, or lack of physical
activity has not been established.



A 30-day continuous metabolic balance study of seven men and eight
women, over 70 years of age, who consumed the RDA levels of protein and
energy found that about half were unable to maintain nitrogen balance
on this level of protein (0.8 g of protein per kg per day). The results
suggested that higher intakes were required to meet protein
requirements. Because the RDA for protein includes a substantial safety
margin and because clinical measurements have rarely found signs of
protein deficiency among healthy older persons, it is not possible to
conclude from these data that persons with intake below the RDA are
protein deficient or that they would benefit from additional protein
intake.



Older people, especially Caucasian women, lose bone mineral and have
a higher incidence of fractures than younger persons. Metabolic and
absorptive factors as well as low intake may contribute to chronic
negative calcium balance. Reduced efficiency of calcium absorption may
be due to inadequate dietary intake, age related changes in gastric
acidity, and/or interactions of intestinal constituents such as fibre,
bacteria, and other nutrients. Perhaps in some individuals a negative
effect on calcium nutriture may be caused by age-related changes in
hormonal control, abberations in vitamin D metabolism, and imbalances
of protein, phosphorus, alcohol, and electrolytes with calcium.



The RDA for calcium of 800 mg per day may not be sufficient to
maintain calcium balance in populations consuming Western diets.
Calcium intake by older people is often marginal, for example, 43
percent of women in nursing homes failed to get two-thirds of their
calcium requirement. Women living at home consumed even less calcium
than those in nursing homes. Older people may have reduced calcium
intake because they avoid dairy products containing lactose, to which
they are intolerant.



As with people of all ages, the frequency with which anaemia occurs
in the older population and determination of its etiology depend on the
criteria used for diagnosis.



Because iron reserves increase with age, studies that examine only
dietary intake of iron in older people need to be interpreted
cautiously. Low dietary iron intake at one point intime does not
necessarily increase the risk for anaemia because iron may still be
available from body stores and because iron absorption increases when
intake and stores are low. In addition, the type of iron and other
components of a meal such as ascorbic acid also influence the amount
absorbed. Comparison of older subjects who took iron supplements with
those who did not showed no clinically significant differences in the
biochemical measures of iron status.



Vitamin deficiency may be a result of decreased dietary intake,
absorption defects, decreased hepatic avidity for folate in Laennec's
cirrhosis, decreased storage and conversion to active metabolic forms,
or excessive utilization, destruction, or excretion.



No comprehensive study of all vitamins and their related enzyme
systems has been conducted. Most studies have only examined the status
of one or two vitamins. A number of studies have indicated a great risk
for vitamin deficiencies in older persons on the basis of low dietary
intakes, but such deficiencies are not always confirmed by biochemical
or clinical results. In addition, interpretation of biochemical
parameters is hampered by lack of data on normal standards for the
older population. For example, a New Mexico study revealed that more
than one-fourth of the older population consumed less than 75 percent
of the RDA's for folate and vitamins B6 and B12
from diet alone. However, biochemical studies failed to confirm that
these individuals were at risk for developing clinical symptoms
associated with low intakes of these vitamins. Intake of vitamin
supplements may explain part of this apparent discrepancy, although
analysis showed little statistical difference in mean dietary intake
for those individuals taking a specific supplement compared with those
who did not take the supplement.



The body pool of ascorbic acid reaches a maximum of approximately 20
milligrams per kilogram. Women require an intake of 75 mg per day and
men require an intake of 150 mg per day to achieve this ascorbic acid
level in plasma. This finding was supported by a clinical trial that
showed that a daily intake of 60 mg was insufficient to maintain this
plasma concentration.



Vitamin A deficiency does not seem to be a particular problem in
older persons, Although NHANES I and NHANES II (the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Surveys) reported that half the study population
over age 65 had vitamin A intakes at or less than two-thirds of the
RDA, only 0.3 percent of the NHANES older population had low vitamin A
blood levels. Whether vitamin A supplement use can account for the
observed discrepancy is unknown, but similar data suggest that older
individuals can maintain normal vitamin blood levels even with
reportedly low dietary intakes.



Previous studies have revealed a generally lowered vitamin D status
in older people, chronically ill individuals, and those living in
institutions with little or no exposure to sunlight. Because the
vitamin D endocrine system is the major regulator of intestinal calcium
absorption, a reduced vitamin D status might promote a negative calcium
balance in older people.



Two studies in the United States have found dietary intake of
vitamin D to be approximately 50 percent of the RDA for older subjects.
However, ultraviolet light induced endogenous production of vitamin D
is the main external factor in maintaining adequate vitamin D status.
Because sunlight exposure activates vitamin D precursors in the skin,
it has been recommended that older people obtain at least minimal
sunlight exposure (10 to 15 minutes) two or three times a week.
Increased sun exposure may help compensate for aging skin's decreased
capacity to produce these precursors. Supplements may be necessary to
compensate for inadequate sunlight exposure due to seasonal variation
in northern latitudes. Moderation of sun exposure should be recommended
because overexposure to the sun is a strong risk factor for skin cancer.



There is no evidence that older individuals are deficient either in
dietary intake or tissue levels of vitamin E. Despite statements that
megadose vitamin E supplements retard the aging process and prevent
atherosclerosis and cancer, its use to treat or prevent other
conditions has not been established.



Nutritional Supplements



It has been estimated that 37 percent of American adults consume a
daily multivitamin preparation, fuelling a $2 billion per year
industry. NHANES II indicated that the persons most likely to take
supplemental nutrients are less likely to need them, and those most in
need of them are least likely to take them. In older persons, vitamin
use has increased dramatically in the past decade. Whether such
supplements improve the health of these people cannot be determined
from existing data, but it is clear that excessive supplementation may
be harmful. High doses of the fat-soluble vitamins A and D are toxic.



Drug-Nutrient Interactions



Although older Americans constitute about 12 percent of the
population, they use about 25 percent of all prescription drugs. This
is not surprising because many chronic diseases associated with aging
are managed with prescription drugs. Over half of the older people take
at least one medication daily and many take six or more a day for
multiple diseases. Cardiovascular drugs (eg. diuretics) are most widely
used by the aging population, followed by drugs to treat arthritis,
neurologic disorders, and respiratory and gastrointestinal conditions.



Many unwanted drug-nutrient interactions in older persons have been
documented. This population requires special consideration because
aging per se changes the absorption, disposition, and
elimination of drugs. The older person with multiple diseases is at
risk for additional drug-nutrient interactions linked to separate drug
therapies for primary and secondary health problems. Even
over-the-counter antacids, laxatives, analgesics,and vitamin and
mineral supplements may result in unwanted drug-nutrient side effects
in the older person.



Effects of Nutritional Deficiencies on the Older Population



Severe malnutrition - protein, calorie, vitamin, or mineral - is
associated with increased mortality, and the relationship of
malnutrition to mortality in older persons is of current interest.
Among severely ill or injured hospital patients of any age,
protein-energy malnutrition greatly increases the risk for
postoperative complications and overall mortality. This association
between nutritional status and survival does not prove a casual
relationship because poor nutritional status may be the result of the
illness or the injury and not its cause.



Several researchers have tried to correlate blood levels of vitamin
C and mortality in an aging population. Among patients admitted to an
acute care geriatric unit, those with low ascorbate levels had a
significantly higher mortality.



Considerable evidence documents an age-related decline in immune
competence. Certain of these changes resemble those induced by
malnutrition. Thus, malnutrition is clearly related to impaired immune
function in older people, and improved dietary intake can at least
partially correct these impairments.



If nutritional deficiencies are related to impaired immune function
in older people, correcting the deficiencies should improve this
function. Among hospitalized patients, intensive nutritional support
does increase immunocompetence. Among older people, dietary supplements
have been associated with improved antibody responses to viral
vaccines, and several studies have reported improved immune function as
a result of zinc supplementation. The possible role of zinc deficiency
in loss of immune function in older people has received considerable
attention.



Whether mental functions necessarily decline with age is
questionable, and whether dietary factors can influence mental status
in older people is also uncertain. Although large population studies
have reported gradual decreases in many mental functions with age,
healthy, active older subjects do not display significant decrements.
This discrepancy suggests that the reported decrements in mental
function are not inevitable age-associated events, rather, such changes
are secondary to the various diseases and physical conditions that
frequently accompany aging.



Alzheimer's Disease



The prevalence of this disease increases with age, while only 5 to 8
percent of people age 65 and over are affected, 35 percent of those
over age 85 are affected. The cost of institutional care alone for
Alzheimer's disease patients is estimated to exceed $40 billion per
year in direct costs and up to $80 billion per year if indirect cost
are considered.



The causes of Alzheimer's disease have not been established, but
potential risk factors include age, family history of Alzheimer's
disease, and head injuries. Whether nutritional factors can alter the
risk for this condition is not known. High concentrations of aluminum
have been found in the neurofibrilla-containing neurons of deceased
patients, suggesting a relationship between aluminum and Alzheimer's
disease.



Because Alzheimer's disease is a neurodegenerative syndrome
involving cell loss and dysfunction, and because there is evidence that
nutrient variables can affect brain metabolism, it might be speculated
that neuro-toxins acquired through the food chain may be involved in
brain cell death.



Implications for Public Health Policy



Aging is accompanied by a variety of physiologic, psychologic,
economic, and social changes that may compromise nutritional status.
However, ways in which the aging process affects energy balance,
specific nutrient requirements, and nutrient status remain to be fully
elucidated. Older adults may not necessarily have the same nutritional
requirements as younger adults, yet current estimates of the nutrient
requirements of older persons are based almost entirely on values
extrapolated from data from studies of younger adults. The ways in
which nutritional status might influence changes in tissue and organ
function change with age and may influence the relationships between
dietary components and the occurrence of chronic diseases in old age.
Until more appropriate age-specific RDA's are established, the current RDA's should continue to be used as standards for nutrient intake of healthy older people.



Older people should consume sufficient nutrients and energy and
maintain levels of physical activity that maintain desirable body
weight and may prevent or delay the onset of chronic disease. Because
it is often difficult to maintain adequate nutrient intake on
low-calorie diets, older people should be advised to maintain at least
moderate levels of physical activity so as to increase caloric needs.
Because many chronic diseases common to older people may originate
earlier in life, dietary guidance to prevent them should be provided
throughout life.



Older people who do not or cannot consume adequate levels of
nutrients from food sources and those with dietary, biochemical, or
clinical evidence of inadequate intake should receive advice on the
proper type and dosage of nutrient supplements. Such supplements may be
appropriate for some older persons, but self prescribed
supplementation, especially in large doses, may be harmful and should
be discouraged. Older people who suffer from diet-related chronic
diseases should receive dietary counselling from credentialed health
professionals, and those who take medications should be given
professional advice on diets that minimize food-drug interactions.



Nutrition Programs and Services



Food Labels:Evidence related to the role of diet in the
aged currently holds no special implications for change in policy
related to food labeling, although the size of the type on the label is
a factor for most older consumers. Information provided on the food
labels should be scientifically sound, understandable, and
nonmisleading.



Food Services:Food services, especially those receiving
Government funds, should be required to pay attention to meeting the
caloric and nutrient needs of older clients. Nutritional assessment and
guidance should be done at hospital admission or enrolment in or
discharge from institutional or community-based services for older
adults.



Food Products:Evidence suggests that older people would
benefit from food products that provide a high proportion of available
nutrients to calories, that have taste appeal, and that are easy to
prepare.




  • The Surgeon General's Report on Nutrition & Health, 1988