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In continents across the universe, there is
a nutritional deficit in the workplace. From India to North
America inadequate nourishment represents safety, corporate
morale and chronic diseases. It impairs productivity by 20 percent.
It threatens long term health conditions which in turn affect
medical insurance costs.
Regardless of the socio-economic culture of a nation, both wealth
and poverty manifest meager nutrition. Although the malnutrition
may be devised in different ways, it all accounts for losses
in productivity. For instance, almost two-thirds of the American
population is overweight. The productivity losses depict 39.2
million work days. Cumulatively, it costs corporations merely,
51.6 billion dollars, annually. In India, nutritionally deprived
diets make up depict an annual loss of 10 billion in illness
and mortality.
Certain analysts recommend workplace meal programs as an incentive
to curtail obesity, medical insurance costs, chronic diseases
and nutritional deficiencies. Despite the recommendations of
analysts, eating a healthy diet should start during the formative
years of childhoods.
From a very young age, eating and snacking habits may shape
the nutritional patterns of growing children. Vegetables, fruits,
cheese, and yogurts are healthy foods to snack on. The foundation
of a child’s eating habits will shape their consumption habits
and bodyweight. The development of nourishing eating choices
begins with education. Through courses on health and life enhancement,
economies across the world may be able to thwart skyrocketing
production losses.
As a result, exercise coupled with physical activity should
play an important role in all individual’s lives. When the body
is depleted of a well balanced diet that includes carbohydrates,
vegetables, fruits, proteins and whole grains, the body is unable
to facilitate proper functions. The outcome will inevitably
impact vitality and the economy.
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