Seven days of healthy eating

Healthy eating is a challenge for lots of people – but it can be even harder to manage if you work in policing. 

So, to make taking control of what you eat a bit simpler, we've created our seven days of healthy eating programme. Developed by nutritionist Anna Earl, it's a great way to kick start your healthy eating plan.

Seeking out unhealthy foods after a traumatic incident or challenging shift is common and understandable. It’s a short-term fix, though. Highly processed meals such as takeaways have a negative long-term impact. 

It’s easy for your partner/family member to get into bad habits, especially since junk food is widely available. Breaking the link between fatigue, lifelong habits, work-related stress and poor food choices isn’t easy. 

This seven day programme aims to give you some helpful, practical ideas and nutritious recipes (more are available in the nutrition for wellbeing section of our website) to build your stock of healthy eating go-to dishes. 

Introduction by nutritionist Anna Earl

Focus: See nutrition in a new light 

  • Outline the health benefits of balancing proteins, carbohydrates, and fats in your plates of food. 
  • Adapt portion sizes of each to boost health and energy. 

Benefits:

  • Beat fatigue.
  • Reduce risk of illness associated with shift work.
  • Create healthier habits and boost energy for the whole family.

How?

Recipe to try: 

 

Focus: 

Switching from white carbs to the more nutritious wholegrain and brown versions of bread, rice and pasta. 

Benefits:

  • Satisfy appetite to reduce snacking between meals.
  • Reduce sugar spikes and dips, which can drive fatigue. 
  • Support gut health. 

How? 

Swap wheat-based breakfast cereals, white bread, rice and pasta with whole oats, wholegrains such as granary and wholemeal bread, quinoa, rye, brown rice and pasta. 

Recipes to try:  

Breakfast - Wholegrain bread, whole oats for porridge. 

 

Focus: 

Make colourful choices with at least five portions of vegetables and fruit. 

Benefits:

  • Reduce sugar spikes and dips.
  • For a more gradual release of energy. 
  • Increase intake of vitamins and minerals, supporting immune and brain health. 

How?  

Add extra portions to popular dishes. 

Recipe to try:

Include the power of using herbs and spices. 

 

Focus: 

The impact of your fluid intake and choices on family health. Aiming to get the daily recommended intake to ensure you are well hydrated. 

Benefits:

  • Healthy alternatives. 
  • Reducing sweetened drinks (including artificial sweeteners in fizzy drinks) can reduce sugar spikes and dips. Drinks with added sugar impact dental health. 
  • Reducing drinks high in caffeine, which can affect sleep and increase stress. 
  • Maintaining good levels of hydration can help digestion, energy and brain function. 

How?  

  • Swap fizzy, energy drinks, squash and fruit juices with (naturally­-flavoured) water, kombucha and herbal teas. 
  • Examples: Look at natural flavourings for water – mint, lemon, cucumber, frozen strawberries. 
  • Aim to reduce intake of caffeine after 2pm, or in second half of a night shift to support sleep. 
  • Replace fruit juice with a smoothie that contains protein as a healthier alternative. 

 

Focus: 

Reduce ultra processed foods, especially as snacks. 

Benefits:

  • Often packed with additives and higher levels of sugar, unhealthy fats and sodium than home-cooked meals, which can increase stress on the body, and risk of various health issues like obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease. 
  • Can lead to nutrient deficiencies which can affect basic functions such as growth and mood. 

How?  

Make your snacks healthy, try one of the following: 

Recipe to try:

Prepare this Teriyaki Salmon with noodles and stir fried veg with fresh / frozen vegetables. 

 

Focus: 

Stressing the importance of gradual, sustainable changes for families with shifting schedules. 

If there is one main cook in the family, today can you encourage other family members to get involved in cooking / prep? 

Benefits:

  • Gradual changes offer the stability your family needs, making health a sustainable journey rather than a sprint, leading to lasting wellbeing for all.
  • Long-term family success.
  • Improved family health.
  • No overwhelming shifts, just gradual changes.

How? 

From the recommended healthy eating practices suggested so far, each family member adopts one small, healthy change daily for a further week. 

Perhaps children would like to make breakfast for parents? Teens get chopping in the kitchen to help you all eat the rainbow today. Can they help make a nutritious bolognese sauce that includes four different plant foods? 

 

Focus: 

Emphasising the importance of planning meals ahead for families on different shifts, to encourage healthy eating. 

Benefits:

  • Reduced stress of what to eat each day to accommodate varied family needs and mealtimes.
  • Better portion control and considered variety of nutrients for all family members.
  • Reduce time and money spent on more random food shopping.

How? 

  • Schedule time to meal plan. 
  • Create a plan for five meals for next week - download the healthy meal planner
  • Identify which could be prepared in advance / doubled in quantity to provide extra for the freezer, to reduce the pressure on one person and on daily food preparation. 

Recipes to try:

 

Eat better as a family

What you and your family eats can have a huge impact on your health and wellbeing. Find out how good nutrition can help.

Go to OK family life