DIETARY ANTHROPOMETRIC NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT
DEFINITION OF DIETARY: Dietary is a system or regimen of dieting, it can also be defined as the regulating of daily food allowance.
NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT
A nutrition assessment is an in-depth evaluation of
both objective and subjective data related to an individual's food and nutrient
intake, lifestyle, and medical history.
Once the data on an individual is collected and organized,
the practitioner can assess and evaluate the nutritional status of that person.
The assessment leads to a plan of care, or intervention, designed to help the
individual either maintain the assessed status or attain a healthier status.
The nutrition assessment involves both subjective and
objective measures, like weight.
Nutrition assessments, which involve an evaluation of objective and subjective data, are used to determine an individual’s nutritional status or growth patterns. Dietitians apply the collected data from the nutrition assessment to plan a nutritional intervention, which involves helping an individual maintain or reach a desired health status. Assessing an individual’s nutritional status involves anthropometrics and dietary data others includes biochemical data and clinical data.
For the purpose of this work we shall be discussing dietary and anthropometric nutritional assessment.
DIETARY DATA
The dietary data component of the nutrition assessment
involves documenting an individual’s dietary intake. There are several ways to
obtain dietary data. The dietitian may simply ask the individual what he or she
ate in the entire 24 hours prior to the nutrition assessment. Alternatively,
the dietitian may request that the individual keep a food diary - a record of
every food or drink consumed for a
specified period of time, usually three days to a week. The dietary data
component may also involve a food frequency questionnaire, which is a survey
used to obtain information about how often a specific food or a specific food
group is consumed. During the dietary component of the nutrition assessment,
the dietitian will also obtain information about any known allergies, food
intolerances and food avoidances.
ANTHROPOMETRICS
Anthropometrics are objective measurements that help
determine amount of muscle and percentage of body fat. These measurements can
be used to assess weight loss or gain in an individual or to compare two
separate individuals. They can also be used to compare growth rates in
children. Anthropometrics may include height, weight, body mass index, skin
fold measurements and body frame size. During a nutrition assessment, a
dietitian takes anthropometric measurements and then compares them to standard
values to make an educated assessment about growth or weight.
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