It’s no secret that what you eat significantly impacts your health.
Your diet can either fuel your body or drag you down.
Consuming a diet that is mostly made up of “fake food” (or heavily processed food products) can harm your health with its excessive sugar, calorie, and fat content. By cutting back on fake foods and focusing on a diet filled with real foods, you can reduce your risk of chronic illness, feel more energized, and keep your body happy and healthy.
A new study published in the British Medical Journal gave some new insight on the negative impact that ultra-processed food has on one’s health. A group of French scientists studied the diets of more than 100,000 people and found that eating ultra-processed foods (like cakes, chicken nuggets, instant noodles, and mass-produced bread) put people at a higher risk of developing cancer. A 10% increase in the amount of ultra-processed food consumed was linked to a 12% increase in certain types of cancers. The study also found that processed foods make up about 50% of the average person's diet in several developed countries – which could be contributing to the rising cancer levels.
An increased risk of cancer is just one of the many reasons why heavily processed foods can be dangerous to your health. A diet high in processed foods is also linked to obesity, heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and nutrient deficiency. This is why it’s important to strive for a healthy, balanced diet filled with more real foods and less fake foods.
To help your employees eat more real food and less fake food, we created the Real Food Challenge. This challenge isn’t about losing weight (although that is one great perk of cutting back on processed foods!) – it’s about feeling good and properly fueling your body. Replacing fake food with real food provides your body with the nutrients it needs to sustain a healthy weight, healthy mind, and healthy brain function.
This challenge considers “real food” as any food that is minimally processed or not processed at all. Fake foods include any heavily processed, packaged foods that include dozens of unrecognizable ingredients, chemicals, and additives. Employees are challenged to replace one fake food with one real food each day for six weeks (for example, replacing a bag of chips for a handful of almonds). This small change can lead to a permanent healthy habit that will help employees feel healthier and maintain a more balanced diet.
Some of the most important benefits of eating more real food include:
On the contrary, heavily processed fake food is terrible for your diet and overall health. Eating too much of it can have some serious health consequences. Here are some examples of why you should eat less fake food:
The Real Food Challenge toolkit comes with six educational handouts, examples of real foods and fake foods, a promotional flier, emails, tracker and tips to help employers promote the challenge among employees. Here’s a sneak peek of what you’ll find in the Real Food Challenge toolkit:
Tips for Avoiding Fake Foods:
Since our world is filled with processed foods, it can be a bit tricky to avoid them. Grocery stores are filled with fake food products marketed as “health” foods. Not to mention, we don’t all have convenient access to Whole Foods or other health-food stores to shop at on a weekly basis. Our toolkit comes with some great tips for avoiding fake foods including:
Real Food Staples:
Focusing on a diet rich with real foods might involve re-stocking your kitchen and pantry, and it can be difficult to know where to start. By stocking up on some of these delicious real food staples, you can keep your grocery list simple and feel confident that healthy, nutritional choices will always be readily available whenever you’re hungry. Some examples include:
Making the Real Food Habit Stick:
By the end of the Real Food Challenge, employees might need a bit of help getting the new habit to stick. While a six-week challenge is plenty of time to start developing a healthy new habit, it might take some ongoing practice to make the real food habit stick for the long run. Some tricks and tips for making the real food habit stick include:
The toolkit also includes some promotional materials for employers to use to encourage employee participation and get employees excited about the challenge. Download your free copy of the toolkit here!
The bottom line is that eating more real food and less fake food is an easy way to reduce calories, consume more essential nutrients, maintain a more balanced diet, and boost your overall health and wellness. Help your employees reap the benefits of real food by hosting the Real Food Challenge at your workplace.
Are you going to try the Real Food Challenge at your company? Let us know in the comment section below!
Like this blog post? Share it with your employees or co-workers with this printable version of the blog!
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