Juicing for Seniors: Meeting Their Unique Nutritional Needs + Pineapple-Avocado Smoothie Recipe (2024)

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Nutrition is an important concern for many seniors, their families and/or caretakers. Seniorsare often confusedby their changing appetites and eating patterns. A weakened or distorted sense of taste can cause trouble for a senior. Because of diminishing taste buds, they often crave foods that are salty or sweet, neither of which is healthful for them. This problem can also cause a loss of appetite, leading to poor nutrition, chronic illness, and inappropriate weight loss.

Enter nutritional milkshakes.

Nutritional supplements and shakes have been on the market for decades, and some are specially touted as high-calorie solutions to seniors’ nutrition problems. As an RN, I have been in the unique position of recommending, providing, and even practically forcing seniors to drink nutritional supplement milkshakes that both taste horrible and provide little real nutrition because without them, the weight loss and susceptibility to illness continues.

Current school of thought suggests that those products are merely covering up issues that could be resolved for the health, happiness, and enjoyment of seniors. Lack of appetite can sometimes be reversed by addressing other treatable conditions such as depression, dementia, ulcers, or even ill-fitting dentures.

Since taste is governed by the sense of smell, often doctors can help patients recover some of their senses by addressing simple issues such as colds, flu, or seasonal allergies.

Juicing for Seniors

Juicing is a simple way to get more vegetables into anyone’s diet, and it can play a role in restoring and maintaining proper health among senior citizens. Since the amount of minerals and vitamins is concentrated, one can get the benefits without consuming huge quantities. This is so important when one’s appetite is suppressed or diminished.

The digestion period is much faster with juicing than with digesting solid food. Adding fresh raw juice to your diet provides an abundance of natural enzymes which can lead to better digestion and improved immunity. Juicing for seniors can make a tremendous difference in healthy living.

What is a good plan for seniors who live alone?

There is good news for seniors who are otherwise capably maintaining their own households. They can feel hopeful, knowing that their loss of appetite may have solvable underlying causes.

While they begin working with their physician to investigate the problem, they can safely begin making juices once or twice a day. The best time would be on an empty stomach, about an hour before regular meal time. By simply drinking a juice—made from fresh, real food—they are guaranteeing their body nutrients that it needs to remain strong and vibrant.

What is a good plan for elderly parents who live with their adult children?

If the adult child prepares all of the parents’ meals, the child should begin introducing simple vegetable juices in a respectful, calm manner. Ideally they would be juices to be consumed before meals. But if the parent is really not eating anything, they can experiment with making smoothies based on the juice, or adding vegetable or fruit thickeners until a palatable consistency is reached.

If the parents are capable of helping themselves, adult children could prepare juices daily and leave them in a container in the refrigerator for the parent. Caution: the nutritional value diminishes quickly, so juices should not be refrigerated for more than 24 hours in such cases.

General caution for all senior citizens:

Be aware that fruit juice has high sugar content. Add fruit to your juicing for taste and palatability, but be careful not to overdo the sugar.

As always, a physician should be consulted before making any radical changes to a patient’s diet if they are on blood-thinners, or cholesterol or diabetes medication. Many green juices can interact with medications, but for the most part, juicing carrots, apples, pears, oranges, and berries are safe for most people (as long as they are not diabetic). For diabetics, juices should be blended with protein powder and low-fat yogurt to balance the sugar.

So, like many things involved in the love and care of the elderly, starting a juicing plan will require thought and planning, but the rewards—a better daily outlook and life due to better nutrition—are worth it.

And more importantly, you may be able to skip those nasty nutritional supplement milkshakes.

I hope you’ll come back again tomorrow. I’ll be sharing about some of my favorite so called “superfoods” to include in your juicing and blending recipes.

Blendof the Day

Today, my recipe will include juicing and blending to give your senior plenty of nutritional support and keep blood sugar levels even. This recipe is both nutritious and delicious.

Pineapple-Avocado Smoothie

Ingredients:

  • 1 smallhandful spinach
  • 1 celery rib
  • 1/2 cucumber
  • 1 inch slice pineapple
  • 2 small apples
  • 1 lemon
  • flesh or 1/2 – 1 avocado

Directions:

  1. Wash all produce well
  2. Peel the lime and pineapple and core the apples
  3. Add first 6 ingredients through juicer
  4. Add your juice into a blender, add the avocado, blend until creamy, and enjoy!(I recommend Breville)

Yield: 20 oz

Variation: feel free to add plain yogurt and/or sugar-free vegan protein powder to bump up the nutritional support if your senior is diabetic or is not eating well.

Find more juicing recipes.

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Juicing for Seniors: Meeting Their Unique Nutritional Needs + Pineapple-Avocado Smoothie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Is juicing good for elderly? ›

The anti-inflammatory properties in fruit juice make it a fantastic complement for aging adults who experience pain or inflammation of any kind. Your body will receive antioxidant nourishment if you eat fruits and vegetables that are rich in vitamin C and darker, leafy green veggies.

Are there health benefits to juicing vs smoothies? ›

When you juice your fruits and vegetables, you may get more concentrated, more easily-absorbed nutrients. This is because the bulk of the vitamins and minerals found within a fruit are typically in the juice — not the pulp and fibrous material that you'd also get in a smoothie.

Is pineapple juice good for seniors? ›

Pineapples are high in manganese, a mineral that is critical to development of strong bones and connective tissue. A cup of fresh pineapple will give you nearly 75% of the recommended daily amount. It is particularly helpful to older adults, whose bones tend to become brittle with age.

What is the best fruit juice for the elderly? ›

Healthy fruit juice choices include pomegranate, cranberry, acai berry, red grape and prune. You can easily lighten up your fruit juice by adding a few ounces of juice to regular seltzer water or pouring a few splashes over a glass of ice.

Does juicing fruit destroy nutrients? ›

Juice is light- and oxygen-sensitive, leaving its nutrients vulnerable to damage, which can further decrease the nutrient content and quality compared to the original, whole-food fruit or vegetable.

Which is better juicing or green smoothies? ›

The final verdict is that both juicing and smoothies can be beneficial if done in moderation with a balanced diet. However, smoothies come out on top in terms of nutrients and fiber for weight loss and digestion.

Is it OK to drink smoothies instead of eating? ›

While they provide several health benefits, drinking too many smoothies can negatively affect your health. They can add a lot of unforeseen calories, especially when a smoothie is simply a beverage with a meal. Lorraine Fye, a Mayo Clinic dietitian, has some simple ways to get smart about fruit smoothies.

What are the disadvantages of juicing? ›

Con: Juice can be sneakily calorie-dense

Juice contains fructose, and while this is a natural source of sugar and carbs, drinking too much of it may lead you to consume too many calories. For example, juicing 5 fruits can add up to 500 calories and more than 100 grams of sugar, says Zarabi.

What do doctors say about juicing? ›

Juicing cuts fiber and can spike sugar

During the cold-pressed juicing process, most of the fiber that's found in pulp is removed. Fiber can help lower cholesterol, promote heart health, and help regulate the body's use of sugar — preventing blood sugar spikes.

What drink is best for elderly? ›

Here's the truth: A simple glass of water is usually your best bet. “Hydration isn't one-size-fits-all,” says geriatric dietitian Kathryn Piper, RDN, LD. “But for the most part, water is the best beverage for most people, since it's free of sugar, caffeine, sodium, and additives.”

What are the long term effects of juicing? ›

Long term, drinking just juice is not healthy since juice lacks protein, which could make it difficult to maintain muscle mass. Cleanses also could put you at risk for nutrient deficiencies since they lack fat-soluble vitamins and essential fatty acids.

References

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