A presentation that the Greek team created and presented during the 1st Learning Meeting in Greece in February 2018, for the Erasmus+ project:"Pro-healthy lifestyle with your mobile phone".
2. Health 2020: The European policy
for health and well-being
• Health 2020 is the new European health policy framework.
• According to the Health 2020 programme, the EU aims to
support the countries’ governments to improve the health
and well-being of its people by offering equal and high-
quality public health systems. This can be achieved by
improving the populations’ diet, offering affordable and
attractive healthy foods to all.
• http://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/health-policy/health-2020-the-european-
policy-for-health-and-well-being
5. • Adolescence is a critical period of each person's life and it is
characterized of quick growth and maturation, as well as,
changes in physical, hormonal and mental condition.
• Adolescents have greater energy and nutrient needs than
adults in order to help their bodies to develop tissues, bones,
muscles, organs, etc.
Adolescence
6. Energy balance
“Energy balance” is the relationship between “energy in” (food
calories taken into the body through food and drink) and “energy
out” (calories being used in the body for our daily energy
requirements).
“energy in”
“energy out”
9. EATING MORE CALORIES =
Consumption of excessive energy
will lead to excessive body weight.
10. • BMI = weight (kg)/ height(m)2
For example: a 15 years old boy
with weight = 58Kg and height = 1,67m
• His BMI is as follows:
BMI = 58 / (1,67*1,67) = 58 / 2,7889 = 20.8
BMI (Body Mass Index)
11.
12.
13. The amount and the quality of foods we eat
impair our body composition
14. How could I calculate my energy needs?
BMR
P.A.
Growth
TEE
Total Energy Needs (TEE) during adolescence include three major components:
1. The energy cost of Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)
2. The energy cost of Physical Activity (PA), which is variable in intensity and
duration
3. The energy cost of growth
15. • According to a balanced and healthy diet, every teenager
has to meet his elevated daily needs, consuming a
variety of foods in order to receive energy and
essential and non-essential nutrients.
Balanced healthy diet
23. “Sometimes” foods & beverages
Fats (mainly
Saturated)
Sugar (mainly
simple)
Salt
Preservatives &
Other Additives
Main nutrients
24. What are „Sometimes Foods'?
‘Sometimes foods’ are high in fat, sugar and/or salt.
• They typically have poor nutritional value
• They are often processed and packaged
• There is no need to eat ‘sometimes foods’ on a regular basis.
According to the experts, examples of sometimes foods include:
• chocolate and confectionary
• sweet biscuits, chips and high-fat biscuits
• fried foods
• pastry-based foods such as pies, sausage rolls
• fast food and takeaway foods
• cakes and ice cream
• soft drinks, fruit juice (not fresh), fruit drinks, sports drinks,
energy drinks, flavoured milk and flavoured mineral water.
25. Food Labels
• “Sometimes foods” are usually packaged and they have a label
on them.
• They are highly processed, with preservatives and other maybe
harmful substances.
• They are high in Sugar, Salt and unhealthy Saturated fats
which can trick our taste buds into wanting more.
• https://fit.webmd.com/teen/food/videos/video-read-the-label
26. Food labels - two simple guidelines
• The shorter the ingredient list,
the better is for you!
• If you can’t pronounce it, don’t eat it
Beware the S’s:
Sugar, Salt, Saturated Fats
30. Findings
• Breakfast is the most frequently skipped meal, especially
among adolescents.
• Breakfast skippers are deficient in vital nutrients that are
not often replenished throughout the rest of the day.
• Choosing to eat a high-quality breakfast is often a sign of
similar healthy eating choices throughout the rest of the
day.
31. Findings
• Breakfast has beneficial effect on cognitive function and
academic performance in school children.
• The quality, the adequacy and variety of the food
consumed does affect academic performance.
• Even a questionably nutritious school breakfast seems to
improve learning in the classroom.
• People who eat breakfast every day are less likely to have
high cholesterol and blood pressure.
32. Energy from breakfast and snacking:
How many calories are enough?
• 20-25% percent of daily energy it has to be consumed in
breakfast and
• 10-15% percent of daily energy it has to be consumed in
snacking meal
• What does that mean?
• If the daily energy needs are 2000kcals,
400-500kcals are from breakfast and
200-300kcals from a snack
33. Nutrients from breakfast and snacking:
Which nutrients are needed?
• Complex carbohydrates (Whole-Grain
products)
Give energy for long time and help brain function
• Proteins
Built muscles and support growth
• Vitamins& antioxidants
Help vital functions of the body
• Fiber
Improves digestion and helps support a healthy
digestive tract
34. • Unsaturated fats (Ω3 fatty acids)
Help brain function
• Calcium
Supports teeth and bones
• Iron
Improves memory, concentration, attention
Nutrients from breakfast and snacking:
Which nutrients are needed?
35. Researches about breakfast & snacking
• The Effects of Breakfast and Breakfast Composition on Cognition in Children and Adolescents: A
Systematic Review, K Adolphus*, CL Lawton, C L Champ and LDye, Adv Nutr May 2016 Adv Nutrvol. 7: 590S-
612S, 2016
• Breakfast glycaemic index and exercise: Combined effects on adolescents' cognition, S B.Cooper, S
Bandelow, M L.Nute, J G.Morris, ME.Nevill, Physiology & Behavior, Vol. 139, Pages 104-111 Febr. 2015
• Breakfast: The most important meal of the day? Charles Spence, International Journal of Gastronomy and
Food Science, Vol. 8, Pages 1-6, July 2017
• The effect of breakfast composition and energy contribution on cognitive and academic performance: a
systematic review, V Edefonti, V Rosato, M Parpinel, G Nebbia, L Fiorica, E Fossali, M Ferraroni, A Decarli, and C
Agostoni, Am J Clin Nutr vol. 100 no. 2 626-656, August 2014
• Breakfast and Adolescent Academic Performance: An Analytical Review of Recent Research, L.A. Hasz &
M.A. Lamport, European Journal of Business and Social Sciences, Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 61 - 79, June 2012.
• Impact of breakfast on daily energy intake - an analysis of absolute versus relative breakfast calories,
V Schusdziarra, M Hausmann, C Wittke, J Mittermeier, M Kellner, A Naumann, S Wagenpfeil and J Erdmann,
Nutrition Journal, 10:5, 2011
37. About breakfast and snacking
• Breakfast is the most
important meal of the day, as
well as snacking, because it
helps
to refuel your body,
gives you energy and
is a great opportunity start
your daily activities with a
boost of nutrients.
38. About breakfast and snacking
• Eating a healthy breakfast and a snack is especially
important for students, because students who eat
breakfast and snack are more likely to
do better in school,
meet nutrient needs and
concentrate better.
39. Don‟t skip breakfast!
• Official advice warns that missing out on a morning
meal raises the risk of:
• obesity,
• heart disease and
• diabetes
Choosing healthy options for breakfast and snack is
important for achieving optimal health.
40. Choices for healthy breakfast
• Oat or other cereals with milk or yogurt and dried
fruits or nuts
• A kind of sandwich with cheese and vegetables
• Boiled eggs and a fresh juice
• Rusks or whole grain bread and honey
• Whole grain bread, olive oil paste and feta cheese with
origan
• Fruit smoothie or milk shake
41. Choices for healthy snack
• A kind of sandwich with cheese and vegetables
• A kind of sandwich with honey or tahini (sesame paste)
or peanut butter
• Oat or other cereal bars
• A king of homemade pie (spinach, apple or cheese pie)
• Homemade oat biscuits
• Boiled chestnuts
• Homemade banana or carrot cake
• Dried or fresh fruits
• A kind of salad
• Non salty nuts
42. A Greek advert
• Eat:
In the morning like a King
At noon like a Prince
At evening like a poor
man (beggar)