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Food Science. Making Wellness a Lifestyle. What is wellness?. Wellness: state of being in good health Quality of life: refers to a persons satisfaction with his or her looks, lifestyle, and responses to daily events. There is a direct corolation with wellness and quality of life.
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Food Science Making Wellness a Lifestyle
What is wellness? • Wellness: state of being in good health • Quality of life: refers to a persons satisfaction with his or her looks, lifestyle, and responses to daily events. • There is a direct corolation with wellness and quality of life. • Most people want to continually improve their quality of life.
Wellness Continuum (see image on pg 11) • Use continuum to define your personal state of wellness. • Premature Death (at one end) and Optimum Health (at the far other) • Premature Death: death that occurs due to lifestyle behaviors that lead to a fatal accident or the formation of an avoidable disease. • Optimum health: state of wellness characterized by peak physical, mental, and social well-being. • Your health status depends where you place yourself on the continuum.
Wellness Continuum (see image on pg 11) • If you are already at optimum health, you want to find a way to maintain this state. • Having optimum health will help you face the challenges of parenthood, career changes, and other aspects of active adult living.
Aspects of Wellness • Physical Health • Mental Health • Social Health • Holistic Approach to Wellness
Physical Health • Physical Health: refers to the fitness of your body • Factors that can affect physical health: • Getting too little rest • Eating too much or too fast/eating too little • Lack of physical activity • Excessive Stress, Poor Sanitation, Recklessness, etc. • Health care professionals use medicine, physical therapy, diet and surgery to help people reach optimum health • Doctors often suggest patients combining medical care with lifestyle changes.
Mental Health • Mental Health: related to the way you feel about yourself, your life, and the world around you. • People with good mental health generally like themselves for who they are. They have positive attitudes and tend to act according to a socially acceptable set of rules. • Irrational fears, stress, and depression may be signs of a mental health problem. • If you are concerned about your mental health, you should talk to a trusted adult. • Building effective communication and problem solving skills can go a long way toward helping you improve your mental health
Social Health • Social Health: describes the way you get along with other people. • Learning to resolve conflicts with others is an important skill that can help you achieve and maintain good social health. • Related to an understanding and acceptance of roles • Learning appropriate ways to act in each role can contribute to your social wellness • Affects a person’s outlook on life and his or her personal state of wellness • Building social skills allows you to improve your social health. Learning to use good communication to resolve conflicts with others
Holistic Approach to Wellness • Holistic medicine: approach to health care that focuses on all aspects of patient care-physical, mental, and social • Need to be aware of your physical, mental, and social health needs • Mange time, money, and other resources to address your needs in all these areas • Taking a holistic approach to wellness means making choices that fit together to promote all facets of health
Factors that Contribute to Disease • Risk factor: characteristic or behavior that influences a person’s chance of being injured or getting a disease. • Certain lifestyle habits, environmental conditions, and health care limitations are known to be risk factors you control • Unhealthful Lifestyle Choices • Poor Environmental Quality • Environmental Quality: refers to the state of the physical world around you. Relates to the safety of the water you drink, the air you breathe, etc.
Factors that Contribute to Disease (Continued) • Inadequate Health Care • Diagnosis: the identification of a disease • Heredity • 25% of the factors that contribute to leading causes of death are hereditary. (Beyond your control)
Health Promoting Choices • Choose a Healthful Lifestyle • Diet: refers to all the foods and beverages you consume. • Negative Peer Pressure • Peer Pressure: the influence people in your age and social group have on your behavior • Improve Your Environment • Choose Quality Health Care
Make a Change • Changing your behavior can affect all aspects of your health.
Nutrition and Wellness • Nutrition: sum of the processes by which a person takes in and uses food • Nutrients: basic components of food that nourish the body (over 45 nutrients are needed in your diet)
Scientific Method • Process researchers use to find answers to their questions. 3 Steps • Make observations • State a hypothesis: Suggested answer to your scientific question • Devise experiments to test the hypothesis if it is true. • Copy Chart • Theory: principle that tries to explain something that happens in nature