The federal government has some new, but familiar, advice for Americans when it comes to their diets: Eat a greater variety of food and nutrient-dense foods, cut back on added sugars and rein in sodium consumption.
This month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services unveiled their 2015-20 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, an updated collection of science-based nutrition recommendations. The guidelines are updated every five years with the goal of improving how people eat to reduce obesity and prevent chronic diseases.
The new guidelines — the eighth version — offer some familiar advice but also include new emphasis and adjusted recommendations based on new scientific evidence. The new guidelines don’t limit the amount of dietary cholesterol a person should consume, as past versions have, because there’s a growing consensus among nutrition scientists that cholesterol in food has little effect on the amount of cholesterol in the bloodstream, said Melissa Martin, a community health specialist at Clark County Public Health. Still, the guidelines advise eating as little dietary cholesterol as possible, because foods high in cholesterol also tend to be high in saturated fat, she said.
“For egg lovers out there, that’s a relief,” Martin said.
One of the biggest differences between the new dietary guidelines and the older versions is the new focus on overall eating rather than individual dietary components, such as food groups and nutrients.