Appetite Nutrition

Appetite Nutrition Registered Dietitian Jennalle Butcher can help you resolve the food fights in your life. Nutrition counselling for individuals and families.

Geneen Roth was the first person to open my mind to a non-restrictive approach to eating. Both for ourselves and our chi...
06/01/2023

Geneen Roth was the first person to open my mind to a non-restrictive approach to eating. Both for ourselves and our children... Unconditional permission to eat cancels out the need to binge and eat in secret. What is your reaction to her "chocolate cupboard" idea?

A mother of an 8-year-old was desperate. “My daughter is gaining weight by the second,” she told me. “I am so afraid that I have passed on my troubles with food to her, and I don’t know whether to remove all candy from the house, take her to a doctor, or put her on a strict diet.”

“What is your daughter’s favorite food?” I asked.

“Chocolate.”

“Is her health good?”

“Yes.”

Desperation calls for radical measures, so I said, “On your way home, stop at the store and buy enough chocolate to fill an entire kitchen cabinet. Designate it The Chocolate Cabinet and fill it to overflowing. Now, tell your daughter that this is hers and hers alone. Wait three weeks and let me know what happens.”

She looked at me in disbelief. “If I give Gracie free reign over chocolate, she will devour every single piece before I can get to the store and buy more. I will create a monster!”

“Try it,” I said.

Fast-forward three weeks. The mother says, “When I first told Gracie about the new plan, she didn’t believe me. Then she plowed through the contents of her cabinet before I could change my mind. I filled up that cabinet many times that first week. But when Gracie realized I was not going to criticize her, she ate less and less. By the second week, I only had to buy a little chocolate and by the third week, none at all. She is more relaxed around food. I am a chocolate-cabinet convert!”

Have you come up with 25 reasons why this wouldn’t work at your house? You are not alone.

However, while some of your reasons may be based on fact, most of them are about your own relationship to food and hunger and abundance, not your children’s.

After you begin exploring your own relationship with food, be mindful about what you communicate to your children. If you judge your children, if you withhold your approval based on what they weigh, nothing good will come of it. They will begin judging their bodies, hiding their food, and defining their worth by what they weigh.

Commit to being lavish with yourself with what you really need. As you do that, you will become a living example of self-care and trust and love. You will be who you want your children to become. Believe me, they’ll notice.

This is an excerpt of "The Other Side of Desperation." Read the full article on my website: https://buff.ly/3qm86ZK

05/18/2023

Our Youth Cooks have been hard at work in the kitchen! This week they made Teriyaki Noodle Stir Fry and Asain Peanut Coleslaw. Later in the month, they will be making sushi! Stay tuned for more photos (and maybe even a recipe)

10/24/2022
10/21/2022

Walking 8,200 steps a day may lower your risk of chronic disease, study finds
A new study suggests walking 8,200 steps a day is the threshold at which you begin to lower your risk of chronic diseases.
• New research based on fitness tracker data adds specificity to our current understanding of how many steps a person should walk each day to protect their health.
• The study suggests that a goal of 8,200 steps a day significantly lowers a person’s risk of chronic disease.
• Increasing step count and walking intensity is beneficial for avoiding most of the chronic diseases that were studied.
You’ve most likely heard that walking is good for your health — but there’s often a lack of consensus about how much walking you need per day to produce health benefits.
For instance, the popular 10,000 steps-a-day goal originated from product marketing during the 1960s and was not the product of medical investigation.
But a new study from researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, TN, takes a fresh look at how many steps a person should take each day — and what kind of steps are most beneficial — to promote good health.
Using data from fitness trackers, researchers found that walking 8,200 steps a day was the threshold at which a person begins to significantly lower their risk of developing a variety of chronic diseases.
The results show an association between walking 8,200 steps and a reduced risk of chronic conditions, including:
• obesity
• sleep apnea
• gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
• major depressive disorder (MDD)
• diabetes
• hypertension
The study also found that walking even more steps continues to increase walking’s benefits for nearly every health condition studied.
The study’s senior investigator, Dr. Evan L. Brittain, associate professor of medicine at Vanderbilt, told Medical News Today:
“For most conditions, higher was better. However, for diabetes and hypertension, we observed a plateau at around 8–9000 steps per day, above which there wasn’t any obvious benefit. That’s not to say people at risk of hypertension and diabetes should stop walking when they reach those levels because there are benefits of activity beyond just those two conditions. CVD [cardiovascular disease] didn’t emerge in our analysis, probably because there weren’t enough incident CVD diagnoses to reach statistical significance in our rigorous analyses and in this relatively healthy cohort.”
Physical activity epidemiologist and kinesiologist Amanda Paluch, Ph.D., assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, not involved in the study, explained to MNT:
“Physical activity such as walking works on multiple mechanisms, affecting nearly every cell in the body to benefit our health.”
“Benefits [include] promoting stronger bones and muscles, weight management, reducing chronic inflammation, lower stress levels, and improving the strength and efficiency of our heart and blood vessels. These benefits of walking result in a lower risk of chronic disease, like cardiovascular disease and cancer, and enable us to live healthier for longer.”
A fitness tracker-based study
The researchers analyzed an average of 4 years worth of data from 6,042 participants included in the National Institutes of Health’s All of Us study.
Individuals tracked their exercise wearing Fitbit wristbands and provided researchers access to their electronic health records. Participants walked an average of 7,731 steps per day.
The data spanned 5,991,662 person-days of monitoring and nearly 50.6 billion total steps.
The cohort was almost 73% female, 84% white, and 71% had a college degree. Their ages ranged from 41.5–67.6, with a median age of 56.7. Individuals ranged in BMI from a healthy weight to obese, with a median BMI of 28.1.
The authors of the study did note that a lack of diversity is a limitation of the study.
“This was a ‘bring your own device’ study, meaning that participants in this study who owned a Fitbit device were invited to share their data,” Dr. Paluch said.
“Therefore, this study only includes participants who had previously bought a Fitbit and wore the device regularly with at least six months of data. The sample in this study is primarily white women with college degrees, which is the demographic likely to purchase and wear a Fitbit regularly.”
Dr. David Cutler, a family medicine physician at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, also not involved in the study, told MNT:
“There is also the possibility of a bias in the study as they enroll healthy people, motivated to improve their health by purchasing electronic health tracking devices, who exercise more, and therefore have better health outcomes. The study gives insight into this specific population, but is somewhat limited in reaching conclusions about those groups (male, sedentary, ethnic minorities, uneducated, etc.) not included in the study.”
Be that as it may, Dr. Brittain noted:
“We were able to find strong associations with several chronic diseases. It’s easy to imagine, then, that the relative benefit of increasing activity is likely to be higher in more sedentary patients who have a higher baseline risk of those diseases.”
“For example, going from 4,000 to 8,000 steps [per] day is probably more beneficial than going from 8,000 to 12,000,” he added.
Intensity of your step count matters
Step intensity is typically measured by the number of steps one takes per minute. Moderate intensity is about 100 steps per minute, and vigorous intensity is 130.
Both were seen as additionally beneficial in the study.
“Participants that did more vigorous walking, such as with an incline or at a faster speed, showed greater health improvements such as lower BMI,” Dr. Cutler said.
“The more often you get your heart pumping at a brisk pace, the better.”
Why walking is good for you
Dr. Cutler said that walking improves cardiovascular health and decreases sedentary habits.
“Another benefit of walking is improved bone health,” he added. “When we walk, ideally at a brisk pace and with some added weights, we are breaking down old bone, which in turn activates the formation of new bone cell turnover. This is ultimately very beneficial at decreasing the risk of osteoporosis, which most commonly affects postmenopausal women.”
Dr. Paluch noted that walking is a great activity that’s accessible to many people.
“You don’t need additional equipment, and you can fit it into your daily lives on a busy day versus finding the hour to make it to the gym,” Dr. Paluch said.
“The current public health guidelines recommend 2 days per week of strength training in addition to 150 to 300 minutes per week of aerobic activity like walking. Strength training can be as simple as 20 minutes of body weight exercises such as push-ups, lunges, and planks.”
– Amanda Paluch, Ph.D., physical activity epidemiologist and kinesiologist
How to get started with walking
If you’re interested in increasing your daily step count to 8,200 steps a day, Dr. Paluch recommends starting with proper footwear and setting small, achievable goals.
“Start by increasing your number of steps by 500–1,000 steps per day and work your way up from there, increasing your goal every 1–2 weeks,” she said.
“Additionally, start with lower intensity walking and as you become more comfortable over the weeks, gradually pick up the pace to a moderate intensity where your heart rate is moderately elevated.”
Dr. Paluch added that the “talk test” — where you can still talk but not sing during your walk — is often a good way to gauge intensity.
“This incremental approach — increasing the volume and intensity of walking over multiple weeks and months can reduce the risk of injury and make the process of starting a walking routine more enjoyable,” Dr. Paluch said.
And as an important reminder, Dr. Cutler and other experts recommend stretching before setting out on a walk.

09/12/2022

Please join us in congratulating Melissa as she begins a new adventure as a student at Mount Saint Vincent University!

It's hard to imagine our kitchen without Melissa behind the counter, but we know her legacy will live on in all the people who've met and worked alongside her over the years.

Our best wishes to you Melissa. Be sure to come back and visit!

Happy anniversary Many Hats!
06/01/2022

Happy anniversary Many Hats!

Celebrate with us! We have successfully made it to our 5th year in business and couldn't be more grateful. Thank you to all of our members who have been a part of the Many Hats community, Your support has been invaluable, allowing us to grow into who we are today. Here is to another 5 years and counting!

I'll take it! 🏆
05/09/2022

I'll take it! 🏆

We’ve sourced the Top Dietitians from Halifax to help you Haligonians get started on your dietary journey with the Nutritionists/Dietitians in Halifax!

Does your child's school have a breakfast program? I've found many parents feel ashamed that their children participate ...
10/25/2021

Does your child's school have a breakfast program? I've found many parents feel ashamed that their children participate in school food programs, but this needent be the case. It's a great opportunity for children to get nutrition during what is, for our kids, often a long day away from home.
Check out the newest Ellyn Satter newsletter on the topic of school food programs in the USA. There's some golden nuggets of information for us Nova Scotia parents in there, too.

Despite its shortcomings, we need NSLP and it does a lot of good. So let's consider what we each can do in order to nurture our children with school meals.

Here is a nice podcast featuring dietitian and family therapist Ellyn Satter herself. Ellyn answers next level questions...
09/13/2021

Here is a nice podcast featuring dietitian and family therapist Ellyn Satter herself. Ellyn answers next level questions about implementing the Satter Division of Responsibility in Feeding. This episode has been called "a masterclass in sDOR." Lots of nuggets in here. If you have never learned directly from Ellyn, she has a pleasant, matter-of-fact way of putting child feeding into perspective, which in today's world, is unique, refreshing and much needed.
Enjoy!

Do you worry that your child isn’t eating enough…or is eating too much? Do you wish they would eat a more balanced diet…but don’t want to be the Vegetable Police? Do you find yourself in constant negotiations over your child’s favorite snacks? You’re not alone! Join me for a conversation...

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Many Hats Workspace, 397 Bedford Highway, 3rd Floor
Halifax, NS
B3M2L3

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Grow a healthy relationship with food!

My name is Jennalle Butcher and I am a Registered Dietitian based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Connect with me for help with any of the following concerns for your family:


  • helping resolve picky eating in children

  • uncertainty that your child is eating enough, or too much

  • concerns about your child's weight