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Since it is critically important for HIV infected people to make positive
dietary changes and be able to learn while eating well, you should find a
support network as soon as possible. |

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How to Change Your Eating Habits
by
Edwin Krales, MS, CDN Nutritionist/Outreach
Coordinator, The Momentum Project Adjunct Professor of
Nutrition, Hunter College
[This article was reprinted from Consumer News]
As I wrote
in
a previous column, we know that
nutrition education, in the form of nutrition counseling,
works. When people get accurate information about how and
what to eat, they do better. I also pointed out getting that
information can be troublesome, because of the problems with
the nutrition business. Using good source of information
such as the Momentum AIDS Project,
Gay Men's Health Crisis and
God's Love We Deliver can help a person get over that
hurdle. The next step is putting that information to work by
eating properly. The struggle to do that has two parts. One
side requires a person to identify bad habits and other
negative factors and cut them out. The other side shows the
need for filling the newly created gaps with good habits.
Imagine wanting to fill a glass with orange juice. If the
glass is already filled with soda you have to empty it out
before you can add the orange juice. If your morning meal
consists of Twinkies, cola and cigarettes, you won't have
room for oatmeal, eggs, fruit or any other nutritious foods.
Changing one's eating habits or eating style requires first
of all a very strong desire . Life itself is a series of
changes. The point is to direct that change in order to get
more positive results.
There are many factors that can
motivate people to change their eating habits. Moving into a new culture and
wanting to become a part of it, looking better in a bathing suit, being sexier,
improving athletic performance or trying to become healthier are just a few
examples. People who get diabetes, heart conditions, high blood pressure or
other illnesses are often motivated to make positive changes in their eating
habits in order to improve their chances of gaining control over their
illnesses. HIV disease can be such a motivator. Remember, there are always
choices to make. Some will be better, others worse.
A strong desire to change is a
great motivator, but a person needs other tools to make the changes. These tools
include enough money for food, access to good cooking facilities every day, an
adequate meal program that keeps one from isolation, and clear water. If you
give someone a bunch of broccoli, a bag of rice, a bag of beans, a freshly
killed, organic, free range chicken and he or she doesn't have a kitchen to cook
in, these good foods have less nutritional value uneaten than eating a bag of
chips and a soda. Along with kitchen facilities such as a stove, a sink with
both hot and cold water, a refrigerator and freezer, and enough pats, pans,
dishes and utensils, the person must also have good enough cooking skills to
know what to do. Having good enough cooking skills means several things. One has
to know various recipes or be able to read them in a cookbook. Are you literate?
Do you have a cookbook? Does your kitchen have the supplies necessary to
complete a recipe, for example, salt, sugar, spices, oil, vinegar, onions,
garlic, hot sauce, soy sauce and butter?
If a person can't read or doesn't
have the skills or equipment to begin the change, than he or she needs to be
able to get help with both literacy and cooking skills. If one doesn't get help,
frustration can kill the desire to change.
Low literacy, or illiteracy also
interferes with a person's shopping ability. If you can't read labels you can't
make the best choices. Watching T.V. enters the picture here, since the most
recognizable products, though not necessarily the best ones, will be those most
easily identified in the store. I am writing about shopping as if it were an
activity, like breathing. We all do it about the same all the time. This is not
the case. Some neighborhoods or areas are much better to shop in than others. In
poorer neighborhoods in New York City it is difficult to find fresh vegetables.
Last year I was at a health fair in the South Bronx. I needed broccoli for a
demonstration and I hadn't brought one. My assumption was that I would buy one
in the neighborhood so that I could tell visitors to my booth that I bought it
locally. It was a good lesson for me. I went to 8 small stores before I found
one that had fresh produce. The other 7 had no fresh or frozen vegetables. All
they had were canned vegetables-peas, carrots, corn and beans. A good
supermarket was a train ride away, a ride that would add three dollars to your
grocery bill if you lived in that neighborhood and needed to shop elsewhere in
order to change your diet.
We must also remember that gender
plays a role here. In our society girls not boys are taught how to cook as a
function of their growing into maturity. As a result many men don't know how to
cook and they don't have a history of cooking to draw from. A woman may not know
particular recipes, but she may remember how her mother prepared a certain dish.
Men in homosexual or heterosexual relationships may be able to rely on their
partners for help with shopping and cooking while working to change their eating
habits, but gay or straight single men may have to go it alone. Women who were
not taught cooking skills have similar problems to overcome.
The question we rarely ask when
we talk about diet change is, "What do your friends and family eat?" What they
eat exerts as much influence as what you eat when you want to change your eating
habits. I say this because eating is not merely taking in nutrients. The
definition of nutrition is "a source of nutrients culturally defined."
The culturally defined part is
what is most difficult to change. If we could make fruits, vegetables and whole
grains look and taste like Big Macs, french fries and a cake, and make sure they
had all the vitamins, minerals, fibers, phytochemicals, protein and
carbohydrates of the original produce, many of our nutrition education problems
would be solved. It would be difficult if not impossible for most people to eat
completely differently from the people they live with. This does not mean that
you should eat alone rather than serve two kinds of meals when you eat with
friends and family. It doesn't mean that you should give up on the idea of
changing your eating habits. Except for the increase in calories and
supplements, most of the dietary changes that a person with HIV who is
asymptomatic should make would be beneficial. Everyone would benefit from an
increase in green leaf and vegetables. Cutting down on junk food and not eating
on the run would be better for everyone. Pure water is better for everyone and
practicing food safety cuts down on the flulike symptoms that accompany food
poisoning, especially during the warmer months. Even though people with HIV need
additional protein, the amount of protein that Americans eat exceeds even those
recommendations. Hopefully, following an HIV diet and increasing the amount of
vegetables will result in an overall reduction in the amount of protein you eat,
and perhaps happier healthier kidneys. Take your friends and family on this road
to better health. It will help everyone.
To be realistic about these
changes means that we have to face the fact that these things take time and
often are not successful. Since it is critically important for HIV infected
people to make positive dietary changes and be able to learn while eating well,
you should find a support network as soon as possible. Going to congregate meal
programs for people with HIV has many advantages. The meals are prepared
especially for people with HIV. The participants exchange the latest information
on many subjects, including HIV nutrition. Very often there are nutrition
counselors present who can answer questions about your eating habits. Many of
the participants have taken giant steps in how they care for themselves and as a
result are good examples. Perhaps most important is sharing the sense of
excitement and optimism about all the new information and therapies starting to
develop. Finally, you will find that change is possible and that you have taken
the right path to achieve that change.
See also,
Breaking the Barriers to Good Eating
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