Free NEWS Letter
The Sugar Trehalose
Affiliate Program
Share the Sugar Story
Book Store
Store Front
Support The Endowment
Enter Amount:
We Accept
VisaMaster CardAmerican ExpressDiscoverssl lock
Main Menu
Home
- - - - - - -
Inside the Human Cell
- - - - - - -
Sugar Science Forum
Glycomics Training
NEWS
HOT Links of Interest
Contact Us
- - - - - - -
Disclaimer
Sitemap
Hurrricane Ike Hits US
PRESS RELEASE
7 FREE NEWSletters
Evaluation Forms

Huntington’s General
Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Parkinson's General
Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Alzheimer / Dementia
General Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Diabetic Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

General Public Health
Evaluation FORM for
Trehalose Nutritional
Pilot Survey (For General
Public without Huntington’s,
Alzheimer’s, or Parkinson’s.)

Meet J.C. Spencer
"Glycomics II"
Replay 30 minute Conference call from July 3rd, 2008

"Glycomics"
Replay 30 minute Conference call from June 5th, 2008

"Trehalose and
Huntington's Disease
"
Replay 30 minute Conference call from May 8th, 2008
Who's Online
We have 28 guests online
Americans not eating enough fruits, veggies Print E-mail
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The U.S. government recently bumped up its recommendations for fruit and vegetable consumption, and a new study suggests it's very likely Americans aren't keeping up.

The United States Department of Agriculture had long recommended that everyone get at least five servings of fruits and veggies daily, but adjusted that requirement to 2 to 6-1/2 cups of fruits and vegetables daily in its new MyPyramid food guide, Dr. Patricia Guenther of the USDA's Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion and colleagues note.

The guidelines specify recommended intake by age and sex, and spell out the variety of vegetables people should eat.

To investigate how many people were meeting the new standards -- and the old ones -- Guenther and her team looked at single-day food intake data for 8,070 people participating in the 1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

They found just 40 percent were meeting then-current recommendations to eat five servings of fruits and vegetables daily. Girls aged 4 to 8 had the lowest intake, with just 10 percent meeting the requirements, while men aged 51 to 70 had the highest, with 60 percent eating at least five fruit and veggie servings daily.

The percentage of people meeting the new MyPyramid requirements ranged from 0.7 percent of boys aged 14 to 18, who are recommended to eat five cups of fruit and veggies daily, to 48 percent of children aged 2 to 3, whose recommendation is two cups.

"Nutrition and other health care professionals must help consumers realize that for everyone over age 3 years, the new recommendations for fruit and vegetable intakes are greater, and in many cases much greater, than the familiar five servings a day," Guenther and her colleagues conclude.

SOURCE: Journal of the American Dietetic Association,

Source Reuters