HSS 1101 Notes Chapter 6 Notes
HSS 1101 Notes Chapter 6 Notes
HSS 1101 Notes Chapter 6 Notes
(Page 172-213)
Men
Age Very Lean Excellent Good Fair Poor Very Poor
20-29 <7% 7%-10% 11%-15% 16%-19% 20%-23% >23%
30-39 <11% 11%-14% 15%-18% 19%-21% 22%-25% >25%
40-49 <14% 14%-17% 18%-20% 21%-23% 24%-27% >27%
50-59 <15% 15%-19% 20%-22% 23%-24% 25%-28% >28%
60-69 <16% 16%-20% 21%-22% 23%-25% 26%-28% >28%
70-79 <16% 16-20% 21%-23% 24%-25% 26%-28% >28%
Women
Age Very Lean Excellent Good Fair Poor Very Poor
20-29 <14% 14%-16% 17%-19% 20%-23% 24%-27% >27%
30-39 <15% 15%-17% 18%-21% 22%-25% 26%-29% >29%
40-49 <17% 17%-20% 21%-24% 25%-28% 29%-32% >32%
50-59 <18% 18%-22% 23%-27% 28%-30% 31%-34% >34%
60-69 <18% 18%-23% 24%-28% 29%-31% 32%-35% >35%
70-79 <18% 18%-24% 25%-29% 30%-32% 33%-36% >36%
SLIDE 8: OVERWEIGHT AND OBESITY (4 OF 5)
- Waist Circumference
o Abdominal body fat can be estimated from waist circumference.
o Simple measuring tape is used to take the girth, or circumference, measurement at
the superior border or top of the iliac crest or hip bones.
o Regardless of where measured, a large circumference is associated with greater
health risk.
o A waist circumference >102 cm in men and 88 cm in women indicates increased risk
of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, hypertension, and
hyperlipidemia.
- Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA)
o BIA: A technique of body fat assessment in which the resistance to a weak electrical
current is measured.
o Another method of determining body fat percentage.
o Involves, sending a weak electric current through the body.
o The premise of this technique is based on the greater electrolyte and water content
of fat free mass vs fat mass.
o In recent years, this technique has increased in use, likely because of its
convenience, low cost, noninvasiveness, and quick estimate of body fat.
o It is important for the body to stay hydrated for more accurate measurements,
because even small fluctuations of body water content could alter assessment.
• Physical Activity
- Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR); Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR)
o BMR: The energy expenditure of the body under resting conditions at normal room
temperature.
o RMR: The energy expenditure of the body while at rest, which includes basal
metabolic rate (the metabolic rate of the body at complete rest) plus the energy
required by sedentary activities, such as food digestion, sitting, studying, or
standing.
o RMR > BMR (amount of energy your body requires at complete rest)
- Exercise Metabolic Rate (EMR)
o The energy expenditure of physical activity.
o 20—35% of our caloric needs.
o Caloric expenditure comes in the form of light to moderate intensity physical
activities, such as walking to class, climbing stairs, doing the dishes, running the
vacuum, and doing laundry.
- Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)
o The energy required to digest, absorb, transport, metabolize, and store nutrients.
o Account for your remaining caloric needs.
o TEF refers to the energy expended eating and drinking.
o Digestion, absorption, transportation, metabolization, and storage of nutrients
require about 5—10% of the energy content of the food or drink consumed.
- Increasing BMR, RMR, or EMR levels lead to a greater caloric requirement for weight
maintenance.
- Increase in intensity, frequency, and time or duration of your daily physical activities will
have a significant impact on your total caloric expenditure and ability to manage your
weight.
• Recommendations
- 60 minutes of moderate-intensity activity daily (IN SLIDE)
- Cardiorespiratory, strength exercises; use large muscle groups. (IN SLIDE)
- To achieve weight loss, a higher level of physical activity is needed. For weight management,
emphasis should be placed on cardiorespiratory and strength-related physical activities.
- Cardiorespiratory activities such as brisk walking, swimming, cycling, jogging, and so on
elevate EMR and RMR during the activity and for several hours afterwards with a positive
impact on caloric requirements.
- Impact on EMR is considerably less than cardiorespiratory training; however, the impact on
RMR due to increased muscle mass is considerable.
- Energy spent on physical activity includes energy used to move the body’s muscles-- muscle
of the arms, back abdomen, legs and so on—and the extra energy required to increase
heartbeat.
- Number of calories expended depends on three factors:
1. Amount of muscle mass being moved.
2. Amount of weight being moved.
3. Amount of time the activity takes.
• Is Dieting Healthy?
- Ultimate goal of a weight-loss program should be improved quality of life and lifetime weight
maintenance. Weight goals should be set to reduce health risks and address medical
problems and help you improve the ability to perform daily tasks without undue stress and
strain – rather than to achieve an “ideal” weight or shape.
- Concerns of dieting:
o More harmful than helpful to health
➢ Dieting to lose weight may be more harmful than helpful in promoting
physiological and psychological health.
o Is rarely successful in the long term.
➢ Because dieting only rarely results in long-term weight loss, the physiological
and psychological stress, damage to self-esteem, and other emotional
disturbances are without purpose.
o Adverse health conditions (metabolism, cardiovascular)
➢ Dieting causes repeated cycles of weight loss and regain, changes in metabolic
rates, increased risk for cardiovascular problems, and other conditions adverse
to health.
o Contributes to the development of eating disorders.
➢ Dieting contributes to the development of eating disorders such as anorexia and
bulimia nervosa, and compulsive eating or binge eating disorder.
• Low-Carbohydrate Diets
- Remember: different nutrient values amongst carbohydrates.
o Over the years, various forms of low-carbohydrate diets have attracted millions of
people with promises of quick, substantial weight loss.
o A major problem with low-carbohydrate diets is that they suggest that all
carbohydrates are bad for you. In other words, these low-carbohydrate diets do not
account for the vast difference in nutrient value among carbohydrate and their
glycemic index. Glycemic index provides a ranking of foods according to how quickly
their sugars are released into the bloodstream.
- Glycemic load guidelines:
➢ The amount of insulin a food triggers is referred to as glycemic load, which
considers both a food’s glycemic index and how much carbohydrate the food
delivers at one time in a single serving.
o Choose plants: beans, instead of meats.
➢ Pick the fruit rather than its sugar-laden juice counterpart. Eating the skin of
apples adds fibre and slows the entry of glucose into the bloodstream. If you eat
potatoes, eat them with the skin on and cut back on other starches. Instead of
potatoes and corn, try sweet potatoes and yams.
o Eat nuts:
➢ Almonds, hazelnuts, peanuts, pecans, and others are healthy low-carbohydrate
alternatives to snacking on chips and desserts made from white flour. They are
not calorie free, though, so manage your intake based on your calorie needs.
o Mix carbs with other foods.
➢ Eating carbohydrates with other foods such as monounsaturated oils (olive or
canola) can slow the rate of carbohydrate absorption. Milk or yogurt with cereal
is one example; bananas and cottage cheese in cereal is another.
o Choose whole grains.
➢ Make whole-grain breads a staple:
▪ Avoid white bread and look for brown breads with 100% whole wheat or
other grains. Consider options such as brown rice and whole-wheat
pizza dough and pasta. These are good choices for lowering your blood
sugar.
o Regular physical activity.
➢ Most people would be shocked if they ate a normal meal, measured their blood
sugar, then noted how dramatically their blood sugars go down after a 30-
minute walk. It may seem simple, but one of the best ways to keep yourself
healthy and still consume the carbs you want is through physical activity.
o Forgo meat in favor of beans. (TEXTBOOK)
➢ It is not necessary to cut all meat-based protein from your diet. However, when
you eat meat, opt for the leaner cuts and choose poultry over pork or beef.
Learn to cook and flavor beans; they are high in protein and other nutrients and
have very little effect on blood sugar insulin.
SLIDE 17: MANAGING YOUR WEIGHT (8 OF 8)
• Developmental Factors
- Hyperplasia, an increase in cell number
o Usually only infancy and puberty
➢ Fat cells normally only increase in number during infancy and the rapid growth
period of puberty.
o Increase, with chronic positive energy balance.
➢ It may also increase in number when individuals are under chronic positive
energy balance and their current fat cells are “full”.
- Hypertrophy, an increase in cell size.
o May increase in size at any time.
➢ It can occur any time in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood – if calorie intake
exceeds calorie output.
➢ People who are obese and have a large number of fat cells may have difficulty
attaining long-term fat loss because there may be a trigger released once they
have substantially decreased the size of each fat cell, resulting in an increase in
appetite.
• Psychosocial Factors
- Relationship: emotional needs and weight problem.
o Uncertain
➢ The relationship of weight problems to deeply rooted emotional insecurities,
needs, and wants remains uncertain.
- Eating: focal point of people’s lives.
o Major part of our socialization.
➢ What is certain is that in Canada, eating tends to be a focal point of our lives – a
major part of our socialization; a social ritual associated with companionship,
celebration, and enjoyment.
• Eating Cues
- Problems associated with fast food:
o High fat, calories, sodium, and carbohydrates.
o Oversized portions, eaten completely.
o Eating quickly, no recognition of satiety.
• Dietary Myth and Misperception
- People eat more than they think.
- Obese individuals: less active.
o Underestimate their dietary intake and overestimates their calorie output.
o Many studies indicate that individuals who are obese do not eat more than their
counterparts at a healthy weight.
o However, the majority of individuals who are obese are less physically active than
people at a healthy weight. Further, if these individuals are not able to accurately
assess what they eat and how much they do for physical activity, it should not be
surprising that they do not know how to alter their behaviours to better manage
their weight.
SLIDE 24: RISK FACTORS FOR OBESITY (7 OF 7)
• Lifestyle
➢ Lifestyle is the critical factor affecting obesity.
- >85% of Canadians classified as sedentary.
o 85% of Canadians do not meet the recommendation to obtain at least 150 minutes
of moderate or more intense physical activity per week. One of the reasons for low
levels of physical activity participation may relate to poor or inadequate experiences
in physical education classes.
- Cultural aspects: education system, work life.
o Another cultural issue regarding our level of physical activity relates to how we
perceive it.
- Labor-saving devices, reduces activity levels.
o A major cause of low physical activity levels is the abundance of labour-saving
devices in the modern household, as well as inactive modes of transportation.
- Exercise viewed as “work”.
o Many believe that they have to ‘exercise’ and exercise is viewed as work, not as
something to be enjoyed.
- Need to increase active living.
• Weight Bias
- Negative attitudes harmful to obese individuals interpersonal interactions and
activities with people who are obese.
- Can lead to social isolation.
o Bias and stigmatization can lead to social isolation and a host of other problems for
individuals who are obese.
- Associated with higher rates of:
o Depression, suicide, and disordered eating
➢ People who experience bias and stigma have higher rates of depression, poorer
psychological adjustment, and higher rates of suicide.
o Poorer psychological adjustment
➢ They may feel that they are “unlovable” and have difficulties in relationships.
They also may have higher rates of disordered eating, issues with self-esteem,
more difficulties in obtaining health care, and a host of other problems.
• Eating Disorders
- Abnormal eating, efforts to control weight
- Abnormal attitudes: body weight and shape
- Occurs more frequently in females with 95% of all diagnosed cases occurring in women.
Further, it tends to be younger women who are most often diagnosed – the majority of
diagnoses occurring between the ages 13—18 years, although diagnosis can occur in the
early 20s and 30s too.
- Eating disorders are not restricted to middle-class white females with overprotective or over
perfectionist parents.
- They occur with similar frequencies in most industrialized countries, including Canada, the
United States, Europe, Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and South Africa.
- Emigrants from cultures where eating disorders are rare and who come to cultures where
they are more prevalent can develop eating disorders as they assimilate to the sociocultural
pressures surrounding body weight and shape in their adopted culture.
• Anorexia Nervosa
➢ Anorexia Nervosa is an eating disorder characterized by excessive preoccupation
with food, self-starvation, and/or extreme exercising to achieve weight loss.
- Obsessed with food, self-starvation, and extreme exercising.
- Many medical problems:
o Damage to bones, muscles, and body systems.
- When anorexia nervosa develops in childhood or early adolescence, one of the first signs can
be the failure to gain weight associated with normal growth rather than actual weight loss.
- About 1% of females in late adolescence or early adulthood meet the diagnostic criteria of
anorexia nervosa while only about 0.3% of men are affected.
- The medical problems associated with anorexia nervosa are many. Starvation damages the
bones, the muscles, and the organs; as well as the immune, nervous, and digestive systems.
- People with anorexia nervosa often lose their hair or develop excessive fine facial and body
hair. A woman’s menstrual cycle usually stops as well (that is, amenorrhea occurs)
- Between 10—15% of individuals with anorexia nervosa die as a result of the disorder.
• Bulimia Nervosa
- Binge eating then purging.
o Self-induced, vomiting, laxatives, enemas, or diuretics, excessive exercising,
or fasting; prevent calorie absorption.
- 1—3% of adolescent and young females.
o Rate among men is about 10% of that among females.
- One frequent health issue often experienced relates to the acid in vomit, which causes tooth
enamel to dissolve.
- Calluses may appear on outer fingers/knuckles from frequent scraping along the teeth when
inducing vomiting by putting one or more fingers down the throat.
• Binge Eating Disorder (BED)
➢ Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is an eating disorder characterized by recurrent
binge eating without any purging behavior.
- Binge eat but do not purge.
o Occurs in about 1—4% of the population and in about 30% of individuals who are
obese and in a weight management program.
o People with BED binge because they are very hungry as a result of restrictive eating
or dieting or to comfort themselves, avoid uncomfortable situations, or numb their
feelings.
- No abnormal attitudes: dieting; body weight, shape.
o BED is often referred to as “compulsive overeating”.
• Anorexia Athletica
➢ Similar to disordered eating, anorexia athletica is not a recognized psychiatric
diagnosis. Many people preoccupied with food and weight exercise compulsively
to control their weight in misguided attempts to gain a sense of power, control,
and self-respect.
- Not a recognized diagnosis; compulsive exercising.
- Control weight = power, control, and self-respect
- Symptoms include:
o Exercise taking time from work, school, and relationships.
o Self-worth based on performance.
o Excessive exercise (fanatic about weight, diet)
o Always pushing on to the next physical challenge.
o Justifying excessive behaviors by defining oneself as an athlete or insisting that
current exercising behaviors are healthy.
o Stealing time from work, school, and relationships to exercise.
• Who is at Risk?
- Many factors: no simple explanation
- Potential factors:
o Win social approval.
o Gain control of life
- Often suffer from other problems.
o Clinical depression, alcohol abuse, compulsive stealing, gambling or other
addictions.
o Some studies using identical twins have shown a possible association between
heredity and eating disorders, as have others that point to the proportionally large
number of persons with an eating disorder who have a mother or sister similarly
affected.
SLIDE 9: EATING DISORDERS (6 OF 7)
SLIDE 11: CREATING A PERSONALIZED PLAN FOR ACHIEVING YOUR HEALTHY WEIGHT (1 OF 2)
SLIDE 12: CREATING A PERSONALIZED PLAN FOR ACHIEVING YOUR HEALTHY WEIGHT (2 OF 2)
SLIDE 17: HOW CAN YOU DEVELOP A MORE POSITIVE BODY IMAGE? (1 OF 2)
SLIDE 18: HOW CAN YOU DEVELOP A MORE POSITIVE BODY IMAGE? (2 OF 2)