Title: MyPyramid USDAs New Food Guidance System
1MyPyramidUSDAs New Food Guidance System
Adapted from USDAs peer-to-peer PowerPoint
presentation. http//mypyramid.gov/downloads/MyPyr
amid Peer to Peer.ppt
2PRESENTATION GUIDE
- Understanding the Graphics
- Key Messages
- Resources
3UNDERSTANDING THE GRAPHICS
4Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005
- Dietary Guidelines place stronger emphasis than
past guidelines on - Decreasing calorie intake
- Increasing physical activity
- www.healthierus.gov/dietaryguidelines
- Interpreted to the public via MyPyramid.gov
- www.mypyramid.gov
-
5Historical Perspective
Food for Young Children
1992
1916
1940s
1970s
2005
1950s-1960s
6MyPyramid Graphic Adults
7MyPyramid Graphic Adults
8MyPyramid Graphic Youth
SIMPLIFIED VERSION FOR GRADES K-3
9MyPyramid Graphic Youth
ADVANCED VERSION FOR GRADES 4-6
10FOOD GROUPS Color Coded
11VARIETY
- Dietary Guidelines
- Consume a variety of nutrient-dense foods and
beverages within and among the basic food groups. - MyPyramid Graphic
- Color bands represent that all food groups are
needed each day for health.
12PROPORTIONALITY
- Dietary Guidelines
- Adopt a balanced eating pattern.
- Sufficient amount of fruits and vegetables
- 3 or more ounce equivalents of whole-grain
products per day - 3 cup equivalents per day of fat-free or low-fat
milk or milk products - MyPyramid Graphic
- Differing widths of the color bands suggest
about how much food should be eaten from each
group.
13MODERATION
- Dietary Guidelines
- Limit intake of saturated and trans fats, and
choose products low in these fats. - Make choices of meat, poultry, dry beans, and
milk products that are lean, low-fat, or
fat-free. - Choose and prepare foods and beverages with
little added sugars or calorie sweeteners. - MyPyramid Graphic
- Food group bands narrow from
- bottom to top suggesting to eat
- nutrient-dense forms of foods.
14PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
- Dietary Guidelines
- Engage in regular physical activity and reduce
sedentary activities to promote health,
psychological well-being, and a healthy body
weight. - MyPyramid Graphic
- Steps and person on them symbolize that physical
activity should be a part of everyday healthy
living.
15ADDITIONAL CONCEPTS
- Personalization
- The name MyPyramid suggests an individual
approach. - The person climbing the steps mentally links
each viewer to the image. - Gradual Improvement
- The slogan Steps to a Healthier You suggests
that improvement should happen in stages, over
time.
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19KEY MESSAGES
20Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005
- KEY CONCEPTS
- Concept 1 Nutrient Density
- Concept 2 Discretionary Calories
- Concept 3 Specific Guidelines
- KEY MESSAGES
- Focus on fruits.
- Vary your veggies.
- Get your calcium-rich food
- Make half your grains whole.
- Go lean with protein.
- Know the limits on fats, salt, and sugars.
21Key Message 1 Focus on Fruits
- Eat 2 cups of fruits per day for a 2,000 calorie
diet - Select fresh, frozen, canned, or dried fruit,
rather than drinking fruit juice, for most of
fruit choices
22Key Message 2 Vary Your Veggies
- Eat 2 ½ cups of vegetables per day for a 2,000
calorie diet - Select from all 5 vegetable SUBGROUPS several
times a week
23Five Vegetable Subgroups
- Dark Green Vegetables
- Orange Vegetables
- Legumes
- Starchy Vegetables
- Other Vegetables
24Subgroup 1 dark green vegetables
- Broccoli
- Spinach
- Most greens spinach, collards, turnip greens,
kale, beet, mustard greens - Green leaf and romaine lettuce
25Subgroup 2. orange vegetables
- Carrots
- Sweet potatoes
- Winter squash
- Pumpkin
26Subgroup 3. legumes
- Dry beans and peas such as
- Chickpeas
- Pinto beans
- Kidney beans
- Black beans
- Garbanzo beans
- Soybeans
- Split peas
- Lentils
The USDA Food Guide includes dry beans, peas and
soybeans in the meats and beans group as well as
the vegetable group however count them only in
one group.
27Subgroup 4. starchy vegetables
- White potatoes
- Corn
- Green peas
28Subgroup 5. other vegetables
- Tomatoes
- Cabbage
- Celery
- Cucumber
- Lettuce
- Onions
- Peppers
- Green beans
- Cauliflower
- Mushrooms
- Summer squash
29Key Message 3 Make at Least Half of Grains Whole
- Make at least half of grains whole grain
- Consume 3 or more one-ounce equivalents of
whole-grain products daily for a 2,000 calorie
diet - The rest of your grains should come from enriched
or whole-grain products
30Examples of Whole Grains
- Whole wheat
- Whole oats/oatmeal
- Whole-grain corn
- Popcorn
- Brown wild rice
- Whole rye
- Whole-grain barley
- Buckwheat
- Tritacale
- Bulgur (cracked wheat)
- Millet
- Quinoa
- Sorghum
31Key Message 4 Get Your Calcium-Rich Food
- Consume 3 cups per day of fat-free or low-fat
milk or equivalent milk products (1 or less) - Kids ages 2 to 8 2 cups per day
- Kids ages 9 up
- 3 cups per day
32Key Message 5 Go Lean for Protein
- Choose lean meats and poultry. Bake it, broil it,
or grill it. And vary your protein choices with
more fish, beans, peas, nuts, and seeds.
Includes section on vegetarian diets
33Key Message 6 Know the Limits on Fats, Salt,
and Sugars
34What Is That Yellow Band On the MyPyramid Graphic?
- Oils are fats that are liquid at room
temperature, like the vegetable oils used in
cooking. Oils come from many different plants and
from fish. Some common oils are - canola oil
- corn oil
- cottonseed oil
- olive oil
- safflower oil
- soybean oil
- sunflower oil
- Some oils are used mainly as flavorings, such as
walnut oil and sesame oil. A number of foods are
naturally high in oils, like - nuts
- olives
- some fish
- avocados
- Foods that are mainly oil include mayonnaise,
certain salad dressings, and soft (tub or
squeeze) margarine with no trans fats.
35Servings
Daily Amounts in cups or ounces
36Portion Sizes Cheese
- 1½ ounces of natural cheese 6 dice
- 1½ ounces of cheddar cheese 150 Calories
- 1 cup of 2 milk 120 calories
- 1 cup of 1 milk 105 calories
37Portion Sizes Meat
- 3 oz. cooked meat, fish, or poultry a deck of
cards - 3 oz. top round steak 150 calories
- 3 oz. rib eye steak 190 calories
- 3 oz. pinto beans 113 Calories
38Portion Sizes ½ and 1 cup
½ cup ½ baseball
½ cup corn 75 calories ½ cup nuts 340
calories ½ cup of yogurt 90 Calories
39Portion Sizes 1 tsp 1 Tbsp
- 1 teaspoon the tip of a thumb to the first
joint
1 tablespoon 3 thumb tips
1 Tbsp sour cream 20 calories 1 Tbsp sugar 35
calories
40A new concept first described by the 2005
Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee
Discretionary Calories
Essential calories are the calories needed to
meet nutrient requirements when consuming foods
in lean, low-fat, and no-added-sugar forms.
41Use Discretionary Calories To
- Increase amount of food selected from a food
group - Consume foods that are not in the lowest fat
formsuch as 2 milk or medium-fat meat or items
that contain added sugars - Add oil, fat, or sugar to foods
- Consume alcohol (for those who consume alcohol)
42RESOURCES
43MyPyramid.gov Web Site
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50Consumer Materials
- Graphic Image and Slogan
- Poster
- Mini Poster
- Web site MyPyramid.gov
- MyPyramid Plan
- MyPyramid Tracker
- Inside MyPyramid
- Kids Materials
- Spanish Version
51THANK YOU!!
DEBORAH GRISCHKE, MS, CFCS grischke_at_msu.edu