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  #1   ^
Old Mon, Feb-16-04, 11:59
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Posts: 2,889
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 280/203/200 Male 69 inches
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Progress: 96%
Location: Dallas, TX, USA
Default "New policy: Build your own food pyramid"

New policy: Build your own food pyramid

USDA's computerized calorie plan to offer individual guidance

Monday, February 16, 2004 Posted: 9:57 AM EST (1457 GMT)


http://www.cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/diet...s.ap/index.html

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government's Food Guide Pyramid cannot cover everyone, so federal dietary planners want people to build their own version.

The Agriculture Department office that manages the pyramid is fitting its Web site to help people tailor individual programs for diet and exercise as part of a food guide policy that will offer more room for variation.

"The Food Guide Pyramid was viewed as being for everybody, but it wasn't related to the individual," said Eric Hentges, executive director of the department's Center for Nutrition Policy and Health Promotion. "If people wanted to make a change, they didn't see how they could use our food guidance to make the change."

As federal officials and scientific advisers update the government's dietary guidance, including the pyramid, they plan to work the Web site into the update. Hentges said the aim is to custom-fit guidance on food and physical activity.

The Interactive Healthy Eating Index offers such guidance in fine detail. For instance, entering coffee at the site produces a menu of 57 choices including coffee, ground, and coffee, Cuban, sweetened espresso as well as Little Debbie Apple Streusel Coffee Cake.

The program prompts users to list how many times a day they had that coffee or coffee cake, and the size of the servings. A diligent user going through the database can list everything consumed every day.

The payoff is a running balance on calories, carbohydrates, proteins and specific nutrients such as vitamin A.

The index ties into federal food guides, comparing a specific food item or a day's dining with what the pyramid recommends. It also rates how successful the user is in meeting the healthy eating recommendations.

The gauge is more exact than the current pyramid, which simplifies calorie choices into three levels. Inactive women and older adults might need only 1,600 calories a day, while active women and many sedentary men might require 2,200, and physically active teenagers might chew through 2,800. Based on that, a person might eat from six serving to 11 servings of grain a day.

Getting physical

The pyramid does not advise people how much to work out. In contrast, a physical activity tool on the Web site has about 600 choices.

Users can choose how hard they work; runners might charge ahead at 6.5 minutes per mile or jog at 12 minutes per mile. By listing their daily activities and the time they spend on them, people can add up the calories they work off just as they add the calories they consume.

The program also lets people compare their daily activities with federal targets for physical activity. For adults, the target is at least 30 minutes a day on most days of the week; younger people ought to do at least 60 minutes.

The government has increased its emphasis on exercise, but the addition of physical activity to the food mix will be a big change. Two members of an advisory committee working on revising the dietary guidelines said the result will bring more balance to the federal focus on calories.

"I hope this version of the guidelines will take a step toward drawing the two together: energy expenditure and energy intake," said Russell R. Pate, associate dean for research at the University of South Carolina.

Added Dr. F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer, director of the Obesity Research Center at the Columbia University Medical School: "It's pretty difficult to regulate intake if you don't do physical activity."

How the new guidelines will look is uncertain. One proposal calls for 12 different levels of recommended calories. That may be too complicated for what is supposed to be an easy-to-grasp graphic, which is supposed to be released in the winter of 2005.
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  #2   ^
Old Mon, Feb-16-04, 12:48
CindySue48's Avatar
CindySue48 CindySue48 is offline
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Posts: 2,816
 
Plan: Atkins/Protein Power
Stats: 256/179/160 Female 68 inches
BF:38.9/27.2/24.3
Progress: 80%
Location: Triangle NC
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http://147.208.9.133/

LOL it takes forever to find the foods, add them, whatever.

Then it gives you scores to see where you stand. On the "Helathy Eating Index" (HEI) you get smily faces if you're withing recomendations, frowny faces if you're too high. I lost points for lack of variety (I just added 3 foods because it took so long!)!

It also states that "Fat, oils and sweets" are not included in your HEI????

Going to try it again later with a "normal" day's intake for me and see how it comes out.

Potentially this could be a good tool.....but they ahve to speed things up!!!!! It's way too slow!
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  #3   ^
Old Mon, Feb-16-04, 15:13
Dodger's Avatar
Dodger Dodger is offline
Posts: 8,805
 
Plan: Paleoish/Keto
Stats: 225/167/175 Male 71.5 inches
BF:18%
Progress: 116%
Location: Longmont, Colorado
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If this is correct then any low-carber will get a poor score on their quality of diet because we do not have the reccommended grains/carbs.

"After providing a day's worth of dietary information or physical activities, you will receive a "score" on the overall quality of your diet or physical activity status for that day. The "score" for your diet looks at the types and amounts of food you ate as compared to those recommended by the Food Guide Pyramid. "
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  #4   ^
Old Mon, Feb-16-04, 15:22
Dodger's Avatar
Dodger Dodger is offline
Posts: 8,805
 
Plan: Paleoish/Keto
Stats: 225/167/175 Male 71.5 inches
BF:18%
Progress: 116%
Location: Longmont, Colorado
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The privacy statement from this USDA site is not the best. The stuff they record is more than any reputable site would record. They record the following:

"1. The Internet domain (for example, "xcompany.com" if you use a private Internet access account, or "yourschool.edu" if you connect from a university's domain) and IP address (an IP address is a number that is automatically assigned to your computer whenever you are surfing the Web) from which you access our website;
2. The type of browser and operating system used to access our site;
3. The date and time you access our site;
4. The pages you visit; and
5. If you linked to the U.S. Department of Agriculture website from another website, the address of that website. "
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