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Fruits & Vegetable Benefits
“Eat your fruits and vegetables.” You’ve likely heard this statement
since childhood. Research shows why it is good advice:
- Healthy diets rich in fruits and vegetables may reduce the risk of cancer and other
chronic diseases.
- Fruits and vegetables also provide essential vitamins and minerals, fiber, and other
substances that are important for good health.
- Most fruits and vegetables are naturally low in fat and calories and are filling.
If you are NOT getting enough (which most people aren't) fruits, vegetables,
vitamins and minerials in your diet, you should seriously consider using products like GeneWize or MonaVie. Diseases are more common than ever and wellness is your best defense!
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Almost Everyone Needs to Eat More Fruits and Vegetables A
growing body of research shows that fruits and vegetables are critical to promoting good health. To get the amount that's
recommended, most people need to increase the amount of fruits and vegetables they currently eat every day. How Many Fruits and Vegetables Do You Need?Fruits and Vegetables Can Protect Your Health
Fruits and vegetables
contain essential vitamins, minerals, and fiber that may help protect you from chronic diseases. Compared with people who
consume a diet with only small amounts of fruits and vegetables, those who eat more generous amounts as part of a healthful
diet are likely to have reduced risk of chronic diseases, including stroke and perhaps other cardiovascular diseases, and
certain cancers.
Whole Foods or Supplements? Nutrients should come primarily from foods. Foods such as fruits
and vegetables contain not only the vitamins and minerals that are often found in supplements, but also other naturally occurring
substances that may help protect you from chronic diseases.
For some people, fortified foods or supplements can be
helpful in getting the nutrients their bodies need. A fortified food contains a nutrient in an amount greater than what is
typically found in that food.
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Fruits and Vegetables and Weight Management
Substituting fruits and vegetables
for higher-calorie foods can be part of a weight loss strategy. Read more on CDC's page How to Use Fruits and Vegetables to Help Manage Your Weight.
Fruits and Vegetables on the Go! Busy lives can benefit from food that's nutritious, yet easy to eat on-the-go,
like fresh fruits and vegetables. Fruits and vegetables are a natural source of energy and give the body many nutrients you
need to keep going.

The Colors of Health Fruits and vegetables come in terrific colors and flavors, but their real beauty lies in
what's inside. Fruits and vegetables are great sources of many vitamins, minerals and other natural substances that may help
protect you from chronic diseases.
To get a healthy variety, think color. Eating fruits and vegetables of different
colors gives your body a wide range of valuable nutrients, like fiber, folate, potassium, and vitamins A and C. Some examples
include green spinach, orange sweet potatoes, black beans, yellow corn, purple plums, red watermelon, and white onions. For
more variety, try new fruits and vegetables regularly.
View a chart that lists specific nutrients and tells you how these nutrients contribute to good health. You can also find out which fruits
and vegetables are good and excellent sources of these nutrients.
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Vitamins and Minerals |
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Vitamins are organic substances (made by plants or animals), minerals
are inorganic elements that come from the earth; soil and water and are absorbed by plants. Animals and humans absorb minerals
from the plants they eat. Vitamins and minerals are nutrients that your body needs to grow and develop normally.
Vitamins and minerals, have a unique role to play in maintaining your health. For
example Vitamin D helps your body absorb the amount of calcium (a mineral) it needs to form strong bones. A deficiency in
vitamin D can result in a disease called rickets (softening of the bones caused by the bodies inability to absorb the mineral
calcium.) The body cannot produce calcium; therefore, it must be absorbed through our food. Other minerals like chromium,
copper, iodine, iron, selenium, and zinc are called trace minerals because you only need very small amounts of them each day.
The best way to get enough vitamins is to eat a balanced diet with a variety of foods. You can usually get all your vitamins
from the foods you eat.
Eat More Fruits and Veggies
Overweight & Obesity is becoming a Huge Issue in America
Information on this page was provided from the CDC website
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