A vegetarian diet is a meal plan that contains little or no animal products.
Types of vegetarian diets include:
Vegan: Diet consists of only foods of plant origin.
Lacto-vegetarian: Diet consists of plant foods plus some or all dairy products.
Lacto-ovovegetarian: Diet consists of plant foods, dairy products, and eggs.
Semi- or partial vegetarian: Diet consists of plant foods and may include chicken or fish, dairy products, and eggs. It does not include red meat.
Alternative Names
Lacto-ovovegetarian; Semi-vegetarian; Partial vegetarian; Vegan; Lacto-vegetarian
Function
A person may choose to follow a vegetarian diet for a variety of reasons, including religious, moral or political beliefs, economics, or the desire to eat more healthy foods.
The American Dietetic Association states that a well-planned vegetarian diet can deliver good nutrition. Dietary recommendations vary with the type of vegetarian diet. For children and adolescents these diets require special planning, because it may be difficult to obtain all the nutrients required for growth and development.
Nutrients that may be lacking in a vegetarian's diet include:
Vitamin B12
Vitamin D
Riboflavin
Zinc
Iron
Protein
Protein is necessary for good health. There are two types of protein: complete and incomplete. Complete proteins contain adequate amounts of the essential substances (amino acids) needed for health. They are found in meats, milk, fish, soy, and eggs. Incomplete proteins contain all of the essential amino acids, but not enough of them.
You do not have to eat animal products to get complete proteins in your diet. You can mix two incomplete proteins or an incomplete protein with a complete protein to get the proper amount. Some combinations are milk and cereal, peanut butter and bread, beans and rice, beans and corn tortillas, and macaroni and cheese.
Food Sources
Side Effects
Recommendations
Vegetarian diets that include some animal products (lacto-vegetarian and lacto-ovovegetarian) are nutritionally sound. Vegan diets require careful planning in order to obtain adequate amounts of required nutrients. The following are recommendations for feeding vegetarian children.
Breast milk or formula should be the basis of the diet until age 1. (See: Diet for age )
Milk or a fortified soy formula should be used.
Fat should not be limited for a child younger than age 2.
Children who do not drink milk or a fortified substitute may lack the following nutrients: calcium, protein, vitamin D, riboflavin. Such children may need a vitamin and mineral supplement.
Vitamin B12 supplements must be used if no animal products are eaten.
Adequate iron intake is difficult to achieve if meat is not consumed. Good sources of iron include prunes and prune juice, fortified cereals and grain products, raisins, and spinach.
NOTE: A registered dietician should review any specialized diet to make sure it meets you or your child's nutritional needs. This should be done before starting the diet.
Converse
My hubby is lacto-ovo-vegetarian. I wish he'd eat fish though...
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i don't agree with the definition of vegan - vegans refrain from consuming or wearing anything from an animal by-product...chemicals are not plant-derived, but vegans eat some of that too. are you vegetarian leeluv? there's a good "vegemites unite" group on Teamsugar you could join.
2I'm a semi-vegetarian; I hate red meat and most deli meats. I only have chicken and tuna plus some dairy. I have to take a look at that group.
3wow.. im a semi-vegetarian too.
4oh my gosh i could not do that
5Vegetarians do NOT lack protein I'm sorry to inform you.. there are large amounts of protiens found in most vegetation. And if you are in fact a vegetarian then you're probably consuming large quantities of bean products. Most veggie burgers or meat substitutes are bean based, so that blows your protien theory out of the water. Also, from what I've come to find, is that most "health" oriented people such as vegetarians/vegans/whatever special category you have for them, consume soy. Soy is also a bean.
I'm sorry if this came off as rather rude but.. vegetarians do in fact get their nutrients, this lifestyle is more focused on remaining healthy therefor the lack of meat really doesn't affect anything. We find our nutrients trust me.
6I've been a vegetarian since age 12 (I'm 29). I have been vegan on and off. I now do not eat dairy due to lactose intolerance, but I do eat organic, free-range eggs. I'm very healthy and eat a hugely diverse diet with at LEAST nine servings of fruits and veggies per day. I actually know several meat-eaters who have anemia... it's all about the quality of the foods you eat, not whether or not you are a vegetarian.
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