Discussion: Health And Healthcare III

As obesity rises, Big Food and dietitians push ‘anti-diet’ advice​

General Mills warns of ‘food shaming’; dietitian influencers promote junk foods and discourage weight loss efforts​

The Post and The Examination analyzed more than 6,000 social media posts by 68 registered dietitians with at least 10,000 followers. The analysis showed that roughly 40 percent of these influencers, with a combined reach of over 9 million followers, repeatedly used anti-diet language.

The majority of the influencers who used anti-diet language also were paid to promote products from food, beverage and supplement companies, the analysis found
 
Also, cigarettes are good for your health. Just like all those fats, salts and sugars.
 

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