1 / 17

Nutritional Needs Throughout the Life Cycle

Nutritional Needs Throughout the Life Cycle. Preschooler. Case Study: Preschooler. Girl 3 years old Family situation: Nuclear family Nutrition concern: Male family member has high cholesterol. Canada’s Food Guide.

mairi
Download Presentation

Nutritional Needs Throughout the Life Cycle

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nutritional Needs Throughout the Life Cycle Preschooler

  2. Case Study: Preschooler • Girl • 3 years old • Family situation: Nuclear family • Nutrition concern: Male family member has high cholesterol

  3. Canada’s Food Guide Recommendations apply for children 2 – 3 years old (does not change based on gender) • Vegetables and fruit – 4 servings • Grain products – 3 servings • Milk and alternatives – 2 servings • Meat and alternatives – 1 serving

  4. Nutrient Requirements: Macronutrients

  5. Nutrient Requirements: Vitamins

  6. Nutrient Requirements: Minerals

  7. Characteristics: A preschooler • Physically smaller than adults • Strong likes and dislikes • Easily influenced by peers, adults and media (commercials and TV shows) • Gaining autonomy

  8. Key issues • Young children must eat nutrient dense foods because they eat much less food than adults (physical limitations) • Preschoolers can be very picky eaters and forcing children to eat will create behavioural problems and poor eating habits in the future • A nutritious diet is important for optimal development (including physical and intellectual) and can have an impact on their future • Time constraints: Nuclear families with kids involved in extracurricular activities and parents who both work full-time often find it difficult to find time to make nutritious meals and sit down to eat them together

  9. Encourage good eating habits • Give preschoolers choices. For example, carrots or corn with dinner. • Keep the atmosphere at the table quiet, happy, and relaxed with conversation. • Do not play tricks. Tricks and punishment with food cause distrust and unhealthy attitudes. • Do not use sweets as a reward, or they will seem more desirable than they are. • Show children that food and cooking can be fun. • Allow children to have more autonomy. Give them their own plastic cutlery and dishware.

  10. Menu: One-day • Breakfast: • 15 g whole-grain cereal (1/2 serving grain) • ¼ cup fresh blueberries (1/2 serving fruits vegetables) • 1 cup 2% milk (1 serving milk) • ½ cup orange juice (1 serving) • Snack: • 6 whole-wheat crackers (1/2 serving grain) • 25 g cheddar cheese slices (1/2 serving milk) • Lunch: • Peanut butter (1 tbsp) and jelly sandwich (1 slice) (1 grain + 1/2 meat and alternatives) • 4 carrot and celery sticks (1/2 serving vegetables) • 1 extra -small oatmeal muffin (1/2 serving grain) • Snack: • ½ granola bar (1/2 serving grain) • ½ apple (1/2 serving fruits/vegetables) • Dinner: • ½ boiled potato (1/2 serving fruits/vegetables) • ½ cup mixed corn and carrots (1 serving fruits/vegetables) • 1 ¼ oz. cubed chicken breast (1/2 serving meat) • ½ cup 2 % milk (1/2 serving)

  11. Menu: eaTracker analysis Macronutrients

  12. Menu: eaTracker analysis Vitamins

  13. Menu: eaTracker analysis Minerals

  14. Recipe: Celery Race Cars

  15. Recipe: Celery Race Cars Ingredients • peanut butter • 4 ribs celery, cut in half • 16 toothpicks • 2 large carrots, sliced into 1/2 inch rounds • 8 chocolate chips Directions • Using a butter knife, spread peanut butter in the cavity of each of the celery rib halves. • Pierce each of the celery ribs with two toothpicks (one at each end), pushing all the way through. This forms the "axle" for the car's wheels. • Attach carrot rounds to the ends of the toothpicks (4 per car). • Place one chocolate chip on each car (this is the driver's head). • Enjoy!

  16. Recipe:Explanation • Makes eating fun for kids • Also contains vegetables and protein-rich peanut butter (best to buy a natural peanut butter rather than commercial brand names) • Skippy, Kraft peanut butters contain high amounts of added sugar that is not beneficial for a preschoolers diet • Note: Could replace chocolate chip with raisin to decrease added sugars.

  17. References Celery Race Cars. (n.d.). Retreivedfrom:http://www.tablespoon.com/recipes/celery-race-cars-recipe/1/?utm_source=blog&utm_medium=embed&utm_campaign=recipe-img Health Canada. (2007). Eating well with Canada’s food guide. (HC Pub.: 4651). Ottawa: Queen’s Printer. Lagoni, L. S., Martin, D. H., Maslin-Cole, C., Cook, A., MacIsaac, K., Parrill, G., Bigner, J., Coker, E., & Sheie, S. (1989). Good times at mealtime. In Good times with child care (pp. 141-158). Fort Collins, CO: Colorado State University Cooperative Extension. United States Department of Agriculture (2010). Dietary Reference Intakes: Recommendations for Individuals. Retrieved from: http://fnic.nal.usda.gov/dietary-guidance/dietary-reference-intakes/dri-tables

More Related