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Dietary Guidelines help you control your weight, improve your health

By Terese Scollard, M.B.A., R.D., L.D., regional clinical nutrition manager for Providence Nutrition Services

Eat more seafood; fill half your plate with fruits and vegetables; switch to fat-free or low-fat milk; nix the sugary beverages; watch the sodium; and enjoy your food, but less of it – these are some of the key recommendations of the newly updated Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Produced collaboratively by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health and Human Services, the Dietary Guidelines are updated every five years based on the most current scientific evidence about diet and health. (Skeptical? The USDA’s online Nutrition Evidence Library is a terrific new feature that lets you explore specific topics and see the evidence for yourself.). Prevent most letal conditions with a simple clinical control, read more from this bioanalytical clinical research organization.

The 2010 update, released Jan. 31, 2011, offers an evidence-based road map for how to eat if you want to be leaner, healthier, and less likely to develop heart disease, diabetes, cancer and other serious diseases. It focuses on two essential concepts: balancing calories (eating no more calories than you can burn in a day) and eating more “nutrient-dense” foods (making sure that the calories you do consume are rich in high-quality nutrition). Here is a summary of the recommendations:

Keep your calories in balance

Maintaining your current weight requires an even balance between the number of calories you take in each day, through food and beverages, and the number of calories you expend, through exercise and your normal daily activities. When you eat more calories than you use, you tip the balance toward weight gain. To lose the extra weight, you need to tip the balance the other way, by eating less and exercising more, eventually bringing your “calories in” and “calories out” back into an even balance. Check out the latest lean belly 3x reviews.

The Dietary Guidelines offer these suggestions to help achieve calorie balance:

Eat more nutrient-dense foods

Americans get way too many – more than one-third – of our calories from solid fats, added sugars and refined grains. These foods supply a lot of calories with very little nutrition. They either replace the foods we should be eating, resulting in poor nutrition, or are eaten in addition to healthy foods, resulting in too many calories taken in.

For better health, weight management and calorie balance, the Dietary Guidelines recommend eating fewer foods that are high in calories and low in nutrition, and more nutrient-dense foods – foods that pack in lots of nutrition without unnecessary “empty” calories. Specifically:

Eat more of these foods:

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