Cravings and Confusion Over Calorie Intake Detract Active Women from Weight Management Goals, New Study Shows
New Meal Plan Created to Help Women Better Meet Nutrition Goals
BARTOW, Fla., Feb. 17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Even for the wellness-minded woman, calorie counting, portion distortion and intense cravings can hinder the impact of an exercise regimen. According to a recent survey, less than half of women (48 percent) who exercise at least once per week have seen any desired result since beginning their routine.[1] A potential cause? Eight in 10 of the women surveyed (82 percent) admit they struggle with poor nutrition habits. These may include succumbing to cravings of foods that lack nutrient density, indulging in oversized portions, and a lack of knowledge about how many calories they should or do consume while participating in a fitness regimen.
To view the multimedia assets associated release, please click: http://www.multivu.com/mnr/54660-florida-grapefruit-juicy-scoop
To help coach women through these common hurdles, Florida Grapefruit has teamed up with nationally-renowned author Dawn Jackson Blatner, R.D. to unveil The Grapefruit Active Lifestyle Meal Plan. This simple, flexible and nutritionally balanced seven-day plan includes contemporary recipes featuring grapefruit to help women fuel their active lifestyle. Fifteen percent of women surveyed admit they don't believe healthy meals taste good, so recipes included in the plan feature fresh, savory and delicious ingredients to help make a healthy lifestyle feel more satisfying.
"Florida grapefruit and grapefruit juice are delicious, satisfying, and contain fewer than 100 calories per serving," says Blatner. "It's peak grapefruit season right now and the perfect time to incorporate this meal plan into your existing regimen to help keep you energized and able to sustain healthy results over time."
Inside the Grapefruit Active Lifestyle Meal Plan
Created especially for women looking to refine their eating habits and support a fitness routine, the meal plan is a flexible seven-day regimen consisting of three balanced meals and two sensible snacks daily. Unlike some popular diets of the past, this meal plan follows the U.S. Department of Agriculture MyPlate food guidance system and includes nutrient-rich fruit and vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy and lean protein. Additionally:
- Fresh grapefruit and 100 percent grapefruit juice are featured daily in some of the recipes and snacks for their invigorating taste, essential nutrients and health and weight management benefits when coupled with a healthy lifestyle.
- On a typical day, women following the plan will enjoy tasty recipes such as:
- Broiled Grapefruit with Yogurt, Coconut & Walnuts for breakfast;
- Savory Chicken Marinara Quinoa Bowl for lunch;
- Parmesan Pita Pizza and Chopped Kale Salad & Lemon Almond Dressing for dinner;
- Two nourishing snacks, such as creamy Yogurt Herb Dip with crispbread crackers and a refreshing G-jito Grapefruit Mocktail, help add even more variety and bold flavor to the plan.
- Each day's suggested meals and snacks add up to about 1,600 calories, but can be tailored based on individual needs by adding or removing a daily snack.
- The plan includes simple ingredient substitutions to meet the needs of those following vegetarian or vegan eating regimens.
More Juicy Survey Findings
- Thirty-five percent of those surveyed admit they tend to indulge in oversized portions.
- More than half (52 percent) of women surveyed admit their weight management efforts are often derailed by cravings or foods that lack nutrient density.
- Nearly seven in 10 (69 percent) respondents say they are unsure how many calories they should consume on a daily basis to maintain or lose weight when active in a fitness regimen.
- About a quarter (27 percent) of respondents have trouble accurately calculating their daily calorie intake.
- Nearly six in 10 women (59 percent) reported seeing some lackluster or even undesirable results from their current fitness regimen, such as unwanted weight gain or bulk, weight loss plateaus or no change to their bodies at all.
For the full scoop on the Grapefruit Active Lifestyle Meal Plan, including variations, tips, recipes and nutrition information, visit Facebook.com/JuicyScoop.
About the Florida Department of Citrus
The Florida Department of Citrus is an executive agency of Florida government charged with the marketing, research and regulation of the Florida citrus industry. Its activities are funded by a tax paid by growers on each box of citrus that moves through commercial channels. The industry employs nearly 76,000 people, provides an annual economic impact close to $9 billion to the state, and contributes hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenues that help support Florida's schools, roads and health care services. For more information about the Florida Department of Citrus, please visit www.floridajuice.com.
The Florida Department of Citrus is an Equal Opportunity Employer and Agency. The Florida Department of Citrus prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities based on race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, and marital and family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.)
[1] The survey is based on 1,051 surveys completed by active adult women (those who reported they exercise at least once per week) aged 25 to 44 years old, conducted on behalf of the Florida Department of Citrus between January 9 and 10, 2012 by Richard Day Research. Respondents were drawn from a national online panel maintained by Survey Sampling International, and completed the survey online. With a pure probability sample of this size, one could say with 95 percent probability that the results based on the total sample have a sampling error of +/- 3 percentage points. |
For more information contact:
Jenny Blonn
GolinHarris
312.729.4467
[email protected]
SOURCE Florida Department of Citrus
WANT YOUR COMPANY'S NEWS FEATURED ON PRNEWSWIRE.COM?
Newsrooms &
Influencers
Digital Media
Outlets
Journalists
Opted In
Share this article