Healthy eating tip 9: Put protein in perspective
Protein
gives us the energy to get up and go—and keep going. While too much protein can
be harmful to people with kidney disease, the latest research suggests that
most of us need more high-quality protein, especially as we age.
How much protein do you need?
Protein
needs are based on weight rather than calorie intake. Adults should eat at
least 0.8g of high-quality protein per kilogram (2.2lb) of
body weight per day.
- Older adults should aim for
1 to 1.5 grams of lean protein for each kilogram of weight. This
translates to 68 to 102g of protein per day for a person weighing 150 lbs.
- Divide your protein intake
equally among meals.
- Nursing women need about 20
grams more high-quality protein a day than they did before pregnancy to
support milk production.
How to add high-quality protein to your diet
- Eat plenty of fish, chicken,
or plant-based protein such as beans, nuts, and soy.
- Replace processed
carbohydrates from pastries, cakes, pizza, cookies and chips with fish, beans,
nuts, seeds, peas, tofu, chicken, dairy, and soy products.
- Snack on nuts and seeds
instead of chips, replace baked dessert with Greek yogurt, or swap out
slices of pizza for a grilled chicken breast and a side of beans.
Healthy eating tip 9: Put protein in perspective
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