create your own

ONQI: What exactly is that?!?

74
rate or flag this page

By whitneyawhite


Make sure to visit spokanefitnesscoach.com for more great health information!

Shopping in Spokane grocery stores can be an overwhelming experience when you are trying to eat healthy. So many labels lead you to believe they are healthy foods, but when you read the ingredients and nutritional value, healthy isn't exactly a word that would come to mind.

Physzique

This month, thousands of stores across the country will begin posting ONQI number. Just what is an ONQI number? Created by Yale University's Griffin Prevention Research Center, the Overall Nutritional Quality Index scores foods from 1 to 100 based on nutrients, sugars, vitamins and salt as well as how it affects your blood pressure and other health concerns, with 100 being the best and 1 being the worst.

The ONQI number will allow you to pick foods that have the best nutritional value instead of trying to guess. Some of the top foods on the list, all with scores of 100 points are mustard greens, fresh strawberries, raw spinach, raw broccoli, blueberries, green beans, and oranges. A few of the lowest scored foods on the list are popsicles, regular soda, and taffy. All have only one point. Diet soda ranks slightly higher than regular soda, coming in with fifteen points.

Once you see the ONQI numbers at your local grocery store, make sure to keep your food choices in the highest possible ranking. The higher the numbers, the better the foods are for you, and the easier it will be for you to eat health, balanced diets. Check out http://www.onqi.org/ for more information.

Physzique

Print   —   Rate it:  up  down  flag this hub

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

kal  says:
16 months ago

Finally, consumers can actually use an easy system BY A THIRD PARTY that has no interest in selling products, to make informed decisions on what to buy. The government should step in and make it mandatory for companies to put this info on their products, right next to the nutritional information.

Ananta65 profile image

Ananta65  says:
16 months ago

Very nice, these initiatives. In the Netherlands we’ve got a similar camapaign going: “Choose consciously”. It leads you to believe that the product you buy is good for you. Indices like these however ignore the fact that most products are consumed in a certain combination. Two products with average or low ONQI scores might just be very healthy when combined AND eaten or drunk in moderation. We’re categorizing products and in doing so we pass over what really is important: our diet and life style.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working