this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2026
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Friendly Carnivore

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Carnivore

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TLDR - EAT MEAT

Driven by perceived health and environmental benefits, initiatives to remove red meat from recommended eating patterns are increasingly being implemented in United States institutions, including schools and hospitals. While these efforts aim to address important issues, they may inadvertently lead to unintended consequences, particularly regarding essential nutrient intake for certain populations. This perspective considers the nutritional value of red meat, examines its potential health benefits, and highlights nutritional risks when intake is reduced or eliminated. Red meat is a nutrient-dense food that provides highly bioavailable protein and several essential micronutrients often lacking in the diet, including iron, zinc, and vitamin B12. These nutrients can be limited or absent in many plant-source foods as well as in some animal-source foods. Red meat’s micronutrient profile is especially valuable for young children and women of reproductive age, including pregnant women. In addition, the protein density of red meat is beneficial for individuals managing obesity and older adults at risk of sarcopenia. Many epidemiological studies suggest potential associations between excessive red meat consumption and increased risk of certain chronic diseases, but this evidence does not conclusively implicate red meat in the development or progression of chronic disease. The nutritional and health implications of reducing red meat consumption must be balanced against the low certainty of evidence used to discourage red meat intake when making dietary recommendations.

consumers are routinely confronted with messages to not only reduce red meat intake below current consumption levels but to eliminate this whole food from their diets. The present perspective proposes that this messaging could cause more harm than good to public health if implemented in public policy or dietary guidelines. Individuals at risk for undernutrition and obesity may benefit from increased intake of key nutrients by eating animal-source foods, including red meat

Full Paper - https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2025.1525011

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[–] xep@discuss.online 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

sealioning

Besmirching the character of participants in a discussion is not acceptable behaviour in this community. Here we try to read the data and give poeple the benefit of the doubt.

This is a formal warning.

Are you able to access the ones cited that reaffirm your beliefs?

That's not relevant to the discussion at hand, which I remind you is about the effects of fibre on the human diet. See rule 2.

pretending

Again, this isn't good faith discussion. Your warning stands.

The amount of money pumped in to provide P hacked results is substantial and one has to consider the source when evaluating what's being said.

Ah, we agree on something.