2nd Edition

The A-Z Guide to Food as Medicine, Second Edition

By Diane Kraft Copyright 2019
    438 Pages 71 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    438 Pages 71 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Reprising The 2017 American Library Association Outstanding Academic Title award-winning A-Z Guide to Food As Medicine, this new edition explores the physiological effects of more than 250 foods, food groups, nutrients, and phytochemicals in entries that include:

    • Definition and background information such as traditional medicinal use, culinary facts, and dietary intake and deficiency information
    • Scientific findings on the physiological effects of foods, food groups, and food constituents
         
    • Bioactive dose when known, such as nutrient Dietary Reference Intakes focusing on 19-to-50-year-old individuals
    • Safety highlights, such as nutrient Tolerable Upper Intake Levels

    A health professional’s comprehensive nutrition handbook that includes all nutrients, nutrient functions, "good" and "excellent" sources of nutrients, nutrient assessment, and deficiency symptoms, as well as summaries of foods, food groups, and phytochemicals.

    New to the Second Edition:

    • Disease- and condition-focused Index that leads readers to foods used to manage specific conditions and diseases
    • Focus on practical recommendations for health maintenance and disease prevention, including tables, insets, and updated scientific findings on more than a dozen new foods 
    • Accompanying teaching aids and lesson plans available online at http://www.crcpress.com

    Features:

    • Dictionary-style summaries of the physiological effects of foods, food groups, nutrients, and phytochemicals alphabetically listed for quick access
    • Approximately 60 B & W images of foods; informational tables and insets that define or illustrate concepts such as drug terminologies, classes of phytochemicals, and medicinal aspects of foods and of a plant-based diet
    • Over 1,000 scientific references from peer-reviewed sources, including The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Evidence Analysis Library, and position statements of major health organizations

    Please see Book Preview for full Table of Contents

    Foreword

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Author

    Chapter A

    Chapter B

    Chapter C

    Chapter D

    Chapter E

    Chapter F

    Chapter G

    Chapter H

    Chapter I

    Chapter J

    Chapter K

    Chapter L

    Chapter M

    Chapter N

    Chapter O

    Chapter P

    Chapter Q

    Chapter R

    Chapter S

    Chapter T

    Chapter U

    Chapter V

    Chapter W

    Chapter X

    Chapter Y

    Chapter Z

    Appendix 1: Major Phytochemical Groups and Specific Phytochemicals Addressed in The A-Z Guide to Food as Medicine, 2nd ed

    Appendix 2: Reference Daily Intakes Used to Calculate % DVs in The A-Z Guide to Food as Medicine, 2nd ed

    Appendix 3: Definitions of Drug Terms Used in The A-Z Guide to Food as Medicine, 2nd ed

    Index

    Biography

    Diane Woznicki Kraft, MS, RDN, LDN, is a biology instructor at Alvernia University in Reading, Pennsylvania and a clinical nutritionist. She holds a Master of Science degree in nutrition from New York University and a Bachelor of Science degree in Nutrition from Penn State University. She and her co-author created the first edition of this handbook as a reference for health care professionals to access scientific findings on the health aspects of foods, food groups, nutrients, and phytochemicals to assist clients educationally on diet and nutrition. She has also authored consumer and professional articles on nutrition for The American Council on Science and Health and The American Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

    "This book can be used as a filter for ‘junk science,’ which clutters many information resources and causes a lot of confusion among the public…the guide is a "go to" resource when trying to sort fact from fiction in response to the burgeoning nutrition information that is everywhere." 

    -Penny M. Kris-Etherton, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Nutrition, The Pennsylvania State University

     

    "This is a nice reference for lay people and clinicians alike to have as
    a starting point for researching certain foods for their impact on health.

    -Amy Hess Fischl, MS RDN LDN BC-ADM CDE(University of Chicago Medical Center)