A balanced diet includes carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, fibre, and water in the right proportions. Each nutrient has specific functions in the body.
Check: Can you name the seven components of a balanced diet?
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A balanced diet includes carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, fibre, and water in the right proportions. Each nutrient has specific functions in the body.
Check: Can you name the seven components of a balanced diet?
Carbohydrates provide energy. Proteins build and repair tissues. Fats store energy and insulate. Vitamins and minerals support various body functions. Fibre aids digestion. Water is essential for all processes.
Check: Which nutrient group is mainly for growth and repair?
Too much saturated fat and salt can lead to heart disease. Fat deposits can narrow arteries (atherosclerosis). High salt raises blood pressure. A healthy diet protects your heart and blood vessels.
Check: How can too much fat affect your arteries?
Too much food leads to obesity. Too little causes malnutrition. Lack of specific nutrients causes deficiency diseases (scurvy from lack of vitamin C, anaemia from lack of iron).
Check: What happens if you don't get enough iron in your diet?
A balanced diet contains all the nutrients your body needs in the right amounts. The NHS recommends using the Eatwell Guide, which shows how much of each food group you should eat. Different nutrients have different jobs.
What you eat directly affects your heart and blood vessels:
The food choices you make now affect your health for life. Heart disease is the UK's biggest killer, and much of it is preventable through healthy eating. Understanding nutrition helps you make informed choices about what you eat and protects your circulatory system.
UK schools must follow nutritional standards. School meals must include fruit and vegetables, protein, and starchy foods while limiting fried foods, confectionery, and sugary drinks. Jamie Oliver's 2005 campaign highlighted how poor school meals affected children's concentration and health, leading to major improvements in school food standards.
Food packaging in the UK uses traffic light labels showing red, amber, or green for fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt. Red means high (eat less often), green means low (healthier choice). This helps shoppers quickly identify foods that might affect their heart health. Products with multiple red lights should be occasional treats, not everyday foods.
The British Heart Foundation recommends eating less saturated fat to prevent heart disease. Swapping butter for olive oil, choosing lean meats, and eating oily fish twice a week can reduce cholesterol levels and keep arteries clear. Studies show that populations eating Mediterranean diets (rich in vegetables, fish, and olive oil) have lower rates of heart disease.
In the 18th century, sailors on long voyages often developed scurvy - bleeding gums, weakness, and eventually death. Scottish doctor James Lind discovered in 1747 that citrus fruits prevented scurvy. We now know this is because oranges and lemons contain vitamin C, which the body can't store. This was one of the first discoveries about deficiency diseases.
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Your body needs some fat for energy, insulation, and absorbing vitamins. It's saturated fat (in fatty meat, butter, cheese) that's linked to heart disease. Unsaturated fats (in olive oil, nuts, oily fish) are actually beneficial. The key is eating the right types of fat.
Carbohydrates include complex carbs (bread, pasta, rice, potatoes) AND simple sugars. Complex carbs release energy slowly and are part of a healthy diet. It's added sugars (in sweets, fizzy drinks, cakes) that should be limited. Don't avoid all carbohydrates!
It's not about cutting out food groups entirely - it's about proportions. You need some of everything. Too much of even "healthy" foods can be a problem, and occasional treats are fine within an overall balanced diet.
Both are micronutrients, but they're different. Vitamins are organic compounds (A, B, C, D, E, K). Minerals are inorganic elements (iron, calcium, zinc). Know specific examples: vitamin C for immune system and wound healing; iron for making haemoglobin in red blood cells.