Nutrition hotline.This issue's Nutrition Hotline discusses what the U.S. government is doing to meet the needs of low-income vegetarian mothers and their children. ********** QUESTION: "What's being done to help meet the needs of vegetarian morns and young children getting government food assistance?" ANSWER: The federal government's Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children doesn't get a lot of attention in the media. This program--WIC for short--provides food vouchers, nutrition counseling, and referrals to health and social services social services Noun, pl welfare services provided by local authorities or a state agency for people with particular social needs social services npl → servicios mpl sociales to low-income pregnant, postpartum, and breastfeeding women and their infants and children up to age 5. Although WIC WIC - WAN Interface Card operates in relative obscurity, the $5.5 billion program feeds over half the nation's infants and about one-fourth of children aged 1 to 4 years, making it one of the nation's largest programs aiding low-income children. Upcoming changes will make it more vegetarian-friendly. While nutrition science has evolved, the food packages offered to WIC clients haven't changed in three decades. A committee formed by the Institute of Medicine recently assessed WIC's food packages and made recommendations for changes. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers the WIC program, will use these recommendations to initiate a proposed rule change over the next year. Recommendations include increasing the amounts of fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains offered to clients; decreasing milk, eggs, and fruit juices; and offering a wider variety of options--such as soymilk soy·milk n. A milk substitute made from soybeans, often supplemented with vitamins. Noun 1. soymilk - a milk substitute containing soybean flour and water; used in some infant formulas and in making tofu in place of cows' milk--to meet diverse food preferences. The recommendations address some key changes since the WIC program began: * Changing nutrition knowledge. Recommendations address advances in nutrition science and concerns about obesity and excess saturated fat saturated fat, any solid fat that is an ester of glycerol and a saturated fatty acid. The molecules of a saturated fat have only single bonds between carbon atoms; if double bonds are present in the fatty acid portion of the molecule, the fat is said to be , cholesterol, total fat, and sodium in American diets. Where possible, recommendations maximize the nutritional value of foods while limiting calories. For instance, the committee recommends clients receive vouchers for only whole grain breads and cereals, reduced-fat dairy products, and more foods with no added salt or sugar. * Greater diversity in food preferences. Federal nutrition programs have focused upon meat-and-potatoes American eating patterns that do not reflect the cultures of an increasing number of people. Recommendations for updated WIC food packages include more choices within categories of foods. For example, the committee recommends that, in addition to fortified fortified (fôrt adj containing additives more potent than the principal ingredient. soymilk, clients be allowed to substitute yogurt or calcium-set tofu tofu Soft, bland, custardlike food product made from soybeans. Believed to date from China's Han dynasty (206 BC–AD 220), tofu is today an important source of protein in the cuisines of East and Southeast Asia. for part of their milk allotment. According to Anna Maria Siega-Riz, a professor of maternal and child health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC and a member of the IOM IOM See: Index and Option Market committee, the newly revised Dietary Guidelines dietary guidelines Cardiology A series of dietary recommendations from the Nutrition Committee of the Am Heart Assn, that promote cardiovascular health. See Caloric restriction, food pyramid, French paradox. for Americans, which emphasize fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, provided the framework for the committee's recommended changes to the WIC food packages. SUZANNE HAVALA HOBBS DrPH, MS, RD |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion