With so much information floating on the web, it’s easy to get confused between fact and fiction when it comes to nutrition. It doesn’t help that new studies are constantly emerging and recommendations quickly change, making it even more confusing to understand what’s healthy. Sometimes, information has been circulating for so long, it is just accepted to be true, even when it isn’t.
“When it comes to nutrition, we imagine that the new or most accurate information will make us skinny, strong, healthy, etc., so we are susceptible to whatever we hear from anyone who acts like an authority or looks the way we want to look,” says Jessica Setnick, MS, RD, CEDRD. “But nutrition as a science is a complicated mix of biology, chemistry and psychology, and most of us don’t have the education to discern what is accurate from what is speculation or wishful thinking or just someone’s uneducated opinion.”
To help you discriminate between all this conflicting information, I’ve consulted with two nutritionists to help bust the most common nutrition myths that aren’t true.
2. You Can’t Eat At Night
3. Gluten Free Helps You Lose Weight
4. Paleo Is Healthy
5. You Shouldn’t Eat Carbs
6. Skipping Meals Makes You Skinny
“When it comes to nutrition, we imagine that the new or most accurate information will make us skinny, strong, healthy, etc., so we are susceptible to whatever we hear from anyone who acts like an authority or looks the way we want to look,” says Jessica Setnick, MS, RD, CEDRD. “But nutrition as a science is a complicated mix of biology, chemistry and psychology, and most of us don’t have the education to discern what is accurate from what is speculation or wishful thinking or just someone’s uneducated opinion.”
To help you discriminate between all this conflicting information, I’ve consulted with two nutritionists to help bust the most common nutrition myths that aren’t true.
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