Not sure what services you need or where to start?
Not sure what services you need or where to start?
By Katie Defoe-Raymond, MS, RD, CSG, LDN – WestMass ElderCare Registered Dietitian
Mindful-based eating is an approach to behavior change that encourages a healthy relationship with food through judgement-free awareness and observation of both what is occurring internally in the body around eating and what is happening in the surrounding environment. In addition to supporting healthy eating habits, the idea of mindfulness is also at the heart of other healthy habits and selfcare.
Through those key concepts of awareness and observation, mindful-based eating encourages recognition of internal cues from the body (feeling of fullness or hunger). It also allows for non-judgmental awareness of non-hunger-related stimuli that result in eating, including triggers for emotional or reactive eating. Part of why mindfulness may support behavior change is that it allows for awareness of emotions and how they may contribute to decisions and actions.
This gentle, non-diet approach surrounding food promotes:
Mindful eating also supports retraining of unhealthy behaviors around food by allowing for awareness of emotions and how they may contribute to decisions and actions relating to eating. Using this knowledge, people can then work towards disrupting the chain of events contributing to overeating, eating when not hungry, restrictive eating, reactive or emotional eating, etc.
Research shows the benefit of mindfulness-based interventions (MBI) to promote chronic disease management and behavior change. Studies also show MBI may result in healthy weight loss and may be a successful part of the treatment approach for eating disorders, although more research is needed.
SAMPLE HUNGER-SATIETY RATING SCALE(adapted from the American Diabetes Association) |
||
FULL | 10 | So overfull you feel sick |
9 | Very uncomfortably full. Feeling that you want to loosen your belt/clothes. | |
8 | Uncomfortably full | |
7 | Very full, beginning to feel that you overate | |
6 | Satisfied. Full but comfortable. | |
Neutral | 5 | Comfortable. Not hungry, not full |
4 | Early feelings of hunger | |
3 | Hungry with hunger symptoms, feelings that you are ready to eat. | |
2 | Very hungry and difficulty concentrating | |
Hungry | 1 | Starving, feeling irritable, dizziness |
If struggling with incorporating mindfulness into eating, consider asking a registered dietitian (RD) for additional support. Many insurance companies cover visits with an RD, and your doctor’s office may even have an RD associated with their practice.
WestMass ElderCare offers consultations with an RD for people 60 years and older. To find out if you qualify for nutrition counseling or other services with WestMass ElderCare, contact the Information & Referral Department (413-538-9020).
For more information about mindful eating, refer to reputable sources online (see sources at the bottom of this article) or visit your local library.
Sources:
WestMass ElderCare is a private, non-profit agency founded in 1974 which is funded in part by grants and contracts from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs. We are part of a network of Aging Services Access Points and Area Agencies on Aging.
WestMass ElderCare is a member of the Pioneer Valley Aging and Disabilities Resource Consortium.