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  2. Healthy diet - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/healthy-diet

    A healthy diet includes the following: Fruit, vegetables, legumes (e.g. lentils and beans), nuts and whole grains (e.g. unprocessed maize, millet, oats, wheat and brown rice). At least 400 g (i.e. five portions) of fruit and vegetables per day (2), excluding potatoes, sweet potatoes, cassava and other starchy roots.

  3. New WHO factsheet: how can we tell if plant-based products are...

    www.who.int/europe/news/item/22-12-2021-new-who-factsheet...

    Many of these plant-based substitutes, also known as analogues, can be defined as ultra-processed foods (UPFs), which means they have a high energy density and tend to be high in sodium, saturated fat and free sugars, and lacking in dietary fibre and in vitamins and minerals found in unprocessed foods (including animal-based foods) and minimally processed plant-based foods.

  4. Complementary feeding - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/health-topics/complementary-feeding

    Complementary feeding. Around the age of 6 months, an infant’s need for energy and nutrients starts to exceed what is provided by breast milk, and complementary foods are necessary to meet those needs. An infant of this age is also developmentally ready for other foods. This transition is referred to as complementary feeding.

  5. Healthy diet - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/initiatives/behealthy/healthy-diet

    These include: Staples like cereals (wheat, barley, rye, maize or rice) or starchy tubers or roots (potato, yam, taro or cassava). Legumes (lentils and beans). Fruit and vegetables. Foods from animal sources (meat, fish, eggs and milk). Here is some useful information, based on WHO recommendations, to follow a healthy diet, and the benefits of ...

  6. GUIDELINE FOR THE CONDUCT OF FOOD SAFETY ASSESSMENT OF FOODS...

    www.who.int/docs/default-source/food-safety/food...

    13. Due to the difficulties of applying traditional toxicological testing and risk assessment procedures to whole foods, and based on the experience of assessing the safety of whole foods, a more focused approach is required for the safety assessment of food derived from animals, including recombinant-DNA animals. This has been addressed by the

  7. Healthy diet: Keys to eating well - World Health Organization...

    www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/healthy...

    Eating a variety of whole (i.e. unprocessed) and fresh foods every day helps children and adults to obtain the right amounts of essential nutrients. It also helps them to avoid a diet that is high in sugars, fats and salt, which can lead to unhealthy weight gain (i.e. overweight and obesity) and noncommunicable diseases.

  8. Food fortification - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/health-topics/food-fortification

    Fortification is the practice of deliberately increasing the content of one or more micronutrients (i.e., vitamins and minerals) in a food or condiment to improve the nutritional quality of the food supply and provide a public health benefit with minimal risk to health. As well as increasing the nutritional content of staple foods, the addition of micronutrients can help to restore the ...

  9. Food, genetically modified - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/food...

    The technology is often called “modern biotechnology” or “gene technology”, sometimes also “recombinant DNA technology” or “genetic engineering”. It allows selected individual genes to be transferred from one organism into another, also between nonrelated species. Foods produced from or using GM organisms are often referred to ...

  10. GUIDELINE FOR THE CONDUCT OF FOOD SAFETY ASSESSMENT OF FOODS...

    www.who.int/docs/default-source/food-safety/food...

    for a thorough safety assessment, properly designed animal studies could be requested on the whole foods. Another consideration in deciding the need for animal studies is whether it is appropriate to subject experimental animals to such a study if it is unlikely to give rise to meaningful information. 12.

  11. A healthy lifestyle - WHO recommendations - World Health...

    www.who.int/europe/news-room/fact-sheets/item/a-healthy...

    Eat bread, whole grains, pasta, rice or potatoes several times per day. Eat a variety of vegetables and fruits, preferably fresh and local, several times per day (at least 400g per day). Maintain body weight between the recommended limits (a BMI of 18.5–25) by taking moderate to vigorous levels of physical activity, preferably daily.