What is food security?
Physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets preferences/dietary needs at all times
What is food insecurity?
Lack of availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or limited ability to acquire acceptable food in socially acceptable ways
What are some causes of malnutrition?
What is alcohol?
A fermented carbohydrate; a product of the metabolism of sugar by yeast.
Where is alcohol metabolised?
liver
What are the negative effects of alcohol?
What are the functions of fat in the body?
What are lipids?
Where can fat be stored?
Adipose tissue
What do the presence of double bonds in lipids dictate?
type, role, function, health effect
What does the overconsumption of protein lead to?
What does insufficient protein intake lead to?
What are complementary proteins?
combining plant foods that together contain all the essential amino acids
What makes a high quality protein?
What is dietary fibre?
What are soluble fibres?
Soluble fibres are viscous and can be digested by intestinal bacteria (fermentability). Found in fruits and vegetables.
What are insoluble fibres?
Insoluble fibres are non-viscous and are not digested by intestinal bacteria. Found in grains and vegetables.
What are storage carbohydrates?
glycogen and starch
What are the two monosaccharides?
glucose and fructose
What are the three disaccharides?
sucrose
maltose
lactose
What do nutritional needs depend on?
What is energy balance?
What does an empty stomach trigger?
What is the most satiating macronutrient?
Protein