ISBN-13: 9783031105647 / Angielski / Miękka / 2022 / 161 str.
What are Fad Diets and How Might They Harm Adolescents?
- Prevalence and epidemiology of adolescent dieting
- Why do adolescents diet?
- What are the consequences of dieting?
- How can you identify a fad diet?
- What do fad diets promise?
- What are the risks of fad diets?
Fad Diets through the Ages
- Descriptions of different fad diets and categories of fad diets – liquid diets, micronutrient fads, one magic
food, one evil food, non-food substances
- Historical origins
- Associated risks
- Purported benefits
- Fad diets change over time, but what do they all have in common?
Adolescent Diet Culture: Where Does It Come From?
- Adolescence: a vulnerable developmental stage
- Media influences
- Family influences
- Peer influences
- Corporate influences
- Weight stigma/bias
- Poor-quality, inadequate, or inconsistent nutritional messaging from clinicians, schools, coaches/trainers, public health platforms
An Overview of Recommendations for Food, Fluid, and Activity in Adolescents
What Can We Do?
- Clinicians: Screen, Listen, Engage, Collaborate- Motivational Interviewing
- Educators: use accurate resources, do NOT use BMI report cards or perform mandatory weigh-ins ; coordinate with health care providers.
- Provide information that adolescents and caregivers can use for effective decision-making
- Coaches and trainers: never suggest diets to adolescents, and never normalize amenorrhea.
- YOU ARE A ROLE MODEL: don’t adopt fad diets yourself and do not suggest them to patients.
- Working with caregivers and shaping family culture around food and physical activity
Healthy Alternatives to Fad Diets: The Total Diet Approach
Fad Diets among Special Populations of Adolescents
· Athletes
· Youth in the performing arts
· LGBTQ+ youth
· Youth with autism
Clinical Cases
Maya Michelle Kumar, BMSc, MD, FAAP, FRCPC, is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at the University of California San Diego and Rady Children’s Hospital San Diego. In her clinical practice, she provides inpatient care for children, adolescents, and young adults with severe medical complications of eating disorders, as well as outpatient care for youth with weight, eating, and feeding disorders. She is a sought-after teacher in the field of adolescent health, training psychology students, medical students, resident physicians, and general pediatricians in the care of adolescents with nutritional disorders. She has presented several workshops at internationally-attended conferences and has authored book chapters and clinical guidelines on the treatment and prevention of nutritional disorders in adolescents. She has been a member of the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine Nutrition Committee since 2015, and was appointed as its Committee Chair in 2019.
Alicia Dixon Docter, MS, RDN is core nutrition faculty and training director for the University of Washington (UW) Leadership Education in Adolescent Health (LEAH). In her recent role as ambulatory manager in Clinical Nutrition at Seattle Children’s Hospital (SCH) and as an adolescent medicine-trained dietitian, she has trained numerous dietitians and health professionals in varied disciplines to work in inter-disciplinary settings with teenagers. She was instrumental in developing and managing the key pediatric weight management clinics at SCH (Child and Adolescent Wellness). SCH’s approaches to addressing pediatric weight management have been recognized by NICHQ (National Initiative for Children’s Healthcare Quality). Alicia is corresponding author for the CHA-sponsored Consensus Statement on the Role of the Registered Dietitian in a Stage 3 Weight Management Program. Her professional passions include inter-disciplinary teaming and training, ensuring excellent RD/clinician communication skills (including but not limited to compassionate care, culturally sensitive care, use of motivational interviewing (MI), avoidance of weight bias, addressing food insecurity and providing developmentally appropriate care). Her career focus has been to ensure the development of nutrition messaging that will promote normal eating and prevent disordered eating. She has been an invited speaker at the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND) and Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine (SAHM) and has authored/co-authored several book chapters on topics related to adolescent nutrition. Alicia is current past chair of the SAHM Nutrition and Obesity committee. During her tenure, this committee published two updated position papers on adolescent nutrition: Obesity in Adolescence (2016) and addressing nutrition disorders in adolescents (2018) and has another in press, Preventing Nutritional Disorders in Adolescents by Encouraging a Healthy Relationship with Food.
Fad diets have influenced our society for hundreds of years. While they are heterogeneous in nature, they make many of the same promises: weight loss, fat burning, muscle building, flatter stomachs, improved gut health, clearer skin, and protection of animal rights and the environment. Not only are fad diets usually ineffective, they are often highly restrictive and associated with significant health risks. Furthermore, the practice of fad dieting dramatically increases one’s risk of developing malnutrition and/or an eating disorder.
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