Perky has recently discovered the NHS Eatwell Guide, which is viewed as a useful practical system for understanding how everyday food choices impact longterm health outcomes.
The Guide is a practical and easy-to-follow framework designed to help people make healthier food and lifestyle choices. It visually illustrates the proportions of different food groups needed for a balanced diet, encouraging people to eat a variety of foods in the right amounts to support overall wellbeing.
By promoting healthier eating habits, the Guide helps reduce the risk of longterm health conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and certain cancers.
One of the key benefits of the Eatwell Guide is its simplicity. Rather than focusing on strict dieting or eliminating foods, it encourages balance and moderation.
It highlights the importance of consuming plenty of fruit and vegetables, wholegrain carbohydrates, lean proteins, dairy or alternatives, and healthy unsaturated fats, while limiting foods high in sugar, salt, and saturated fat.
The Guide also supports healthier hydration choices by recommending water, lower-fat milk, and low-sugar drinks. In addition, it helps to develop sustainable eating habits that can improve energy levels, support mental wellbeing, and maintain a healthy weight.
A simple plate-shaped visual diagram is employed to show the proportions of different food groups that should make up a healthy, balanced diet. The plate is divided into coloured sections, with each section representing a specific food group and the relative amount that should be eaten overall.
The use of colour coding, proportional sizing, and familiar food examples makes the Guide accessible and easy to understand.
The largest sections are allocated to fruit and vegetables, and starchy carbohydrates such as potatoes, bread, rice, pasta, and wholegrain foods. This visually emphasises that these foods should form the biggest part of daily meals.
Smaller sections are used for protein sources, including beans, pulses, fish, eggs, meat, and other proteins, as well as dairy products and alternatives, indicating that these should be consumed in moderate amounts.
A very small section is dedicated to oils and spreads, highlighting that although unsaturated fats are important, they should only be eaten in small quantities.
Foods and drinks high in fat, salt, and sugar are positioned outside the main plate, showing that they are not necessary as part of a healthy balanced diet and should only be consumed occasionally.
