Nutrition is one of the most frequent subjects my clients want to discuss, and often one of the most controversial. Raw diets,1 vegetarian or vegan pet foods,2 ketogenic diets for pets,3 the significance of “artificial” versus “natural” pet food ingredients,4 and the fundamental question of whether veterinarians are trusted counselors when it comes to nutrition are just some of the controversies in pet nutrition I have covered in Veterinary Practice News.
These are all tough issues, both because of the passionate opinions they engender and because of the inevitably limited and imperfect scientific evidence available to adjudicate them. A key tenet of evidence-based medicine, however, is that we have to make judgments based on the evidence we have, not the evidence we wish we had. Another core principle is that our confidence in any judgment we make should only be as strong as the evidence allows.
Today’s topic is one where claims and passions far exceed the available evidence—fresh pet food. Various terms are used to describe such diets, including fresh, lightly-cooked, whole-food, etc., and there is no standardized terminology for these diets. I will mostly use “fresh food” as a shorthand for the myriad diets marketed in this way.
In addition to homemade fresh diets prepared by individual dog owners, a number of companies are now selling cooked commercial diets that are designed and packaged like fresh, homemade foods rather than extruded kibble or traditional canned pet food. These companies market such diets with implicit, or often explicit, claims that they are healthier than traditional commercial foods.
In an extreme example, the founders of Just Food for Dogs (JFFD) have written a polemical book titled “Big Kibble: The Hidden Dangers of the Pet Food Industry” to promote their alternative to traditional commercial diets. They have not been restrained or respectful in their response to criticism of their claims and marketing methods. The company explicitly claims their product is healthier that traditional kibble, and the leaders are not impressed by calls for evidence to prove this: “The mainstream veterinarian needs research and proof that real food is healthier, and that just boggles my mind,” Dr. Chavez adds. “We’re the last healthcare profession that is recommending an ultra-processed daily sustenance. It’s just crazy.”
So, is it crazy to wonder if fresh foods really are healthier than canned or kibble? Can we assume that dogs eating traditional commercial diets will have shorter lives and more health problems than dogs eating fresh diets? Regular readers of this column will already know my answer—nope! Equally “obvious” claims about the complicated relationship between environmental factors and health outcomes have been stunningly wrong many times in the history of human and veterinary medicine, and we should place very little confidence such beliefs without scientific evidence.
The ideal evidence for these claims, of course, would be long-term comparative feeding studies showing dogs eating fresh diets live longer and experience less disease than those eating kibble or canned foods. Such studies would be extremely complex and expensive to run, and I don’t see much chance companies on either side of the debate will step up to support them. This means that, as usual, we need to rely on less robust evidence (and proportion our confidence accordingly).
There is certainly epidemiologic evidence that consumption of whole foods, particularly fruits and vegetables, is associated with improved health outcomes in people compared with packaged and convenience foods. But it needs to be emphasized that commercial dog food is not the nutritional equivalent of potato chips just because both come in bags. Human snack and convenience foods are deliberately designed to be appealing, not nutritious. Pet foods are formulated with much more emphasis on nutritional value, and have been used and evaluated extensively for decades for their impact on health. They may well not be the optimal food we should be feeding, but they are hardly the egregious poison their detractors claim. And as the analogy breaks down, so does the relevance of the epidemiologic evidence in humans to pet feeding practices.
There is little direct research on the potential health impact of fresh diets compared with other cooked pet foods. There is research showing that homemade diets are often nutritionally unbalanced and incomplete, but little evidence pertaining to commercial cooked fresh diets.5–10
A small study was reported as a poster at the 2014 American Academy of Veterinary Nutrition Research Symposium, and this is often cited by fresh food advocates as positive evidence for their claims. Twenty-one dogs of various breeds were transitioned from kibble to a frozen cooked fresh-food diet and basic bloodwork and exams were conducted at the beginning of feeding the diet and again at 6 months and twelve months later. This was a pilot study, so there was no control group, no blinding, no pre-specified outcomes or hypotheses, no reported accounting for repeated measures or multiple comparisons in the statistical analysis, no discussion of any other aspects of the dogs’ health or environment, and overall no significant control for bias or random error. This limitation is especially relevant given that the lead author is Chief Medical Officer for JFFD and also an author of the book I mentioned earlier.
A few differences were found in some clinical laboratory measures before and after the transition to the JFFD diet. Increases were seen in red blood cell count and globulins, for example, though all values remained within reference intervals for all dogs. This sort of data might suggest hypotheses for future testing, but it doesn’t support any specific conclusions about the relative merits or health effects of different types of diet. It certainly does not support the claims in a JFFD press release that their foods “could benefit immune health” and that if the purported trends in the blood values continue for a lifetime “we may see a decrease in chronic diseases such as cancer, renal failure, kidney disease, inflammatory bowel disease, dental disease, etc.”
There is some laboratory research showing fresh diets have higher digestibility than extruded pet foods, and there may be effects on gut flora and other physiologic parameters.11–14 However, these are, once again, only useful bits of data that suggest testable hypotheses, not conclusive evidence for real-world health effects.
Personally, I am sympathetic to the hypothesis that pet diet which contain less processed whole ingredients may be superior to conventional canned or extruded dry diets in terms of health outcomes. The epidemiologic evidence in humans, and pre-clinical research in laboratory animal models is suggestive, though by no means conclusive. There are, of course, other issues besides health impacts that must be considered in comparing the merits of different types of pet food. The affordability and accessibility of different diets, storage and stability, safety, environmental sustainability, and many other factors are relevant as well to the recommendations of veterinarians and the feeding choices of dog owners.
The bottom line, as always, is that we should make decisions based on the best possible evidence, and we should limit our claims and confidence to what the evidence can support. Currently, the most optimistic assessment of diets identified by marketing materials as fresh, lightly-cooked, whole-food, human-grade, etc. is that it is plausible they may have health benefits if properly formulated by veterinary nutritionists and properly handled and fed by owners. Biologic plausibility and pre-clinical evidence are necessary starting points, but evidence from the real world on meaningful health outcomes will be needed before we can have any confidence in claims about the benefits of such diets.
References
1. McKenzie BA. Debating Raw Diets. Vet Pract News. January 2019:30-31.
2. McKenzie B. Are Vegan of Vegetarian Diets Good for Pets? Vet Pract News. July 2019:26-27.
3. McKenzie BA. Is Keto Kind to Pets? Vet Pract News. January 2020:30-31.
4. McKenzie B. Is banning “artificial” ingredients based on fear or science? Vet Pract News. March 2019:36-37.
5. Lauten S, Smith T, Kirk C. Computer analysis of nutrient sufficiency of published home-cooked diets for dogs and cats [abstract]. J Vet Intern Med. 2005;19(3):476-477.
6. Heinze CR, Gomez FC, Freeman LM. Assessment of commercial diets and recipes for home-prepared diets recommended for dogs with cancer. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2012;241(11):1453-1460. doi:10.2460/javma.241.11.1453
7. Larsen JA, Parks EM, Heinze CR, Fascetti AJ. Evaluation of recipes for home-prepared diets for dogs and cats with chronic kidney disease. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2012;240(5):532-538. doi:10.2460/javma.240.5.532
8. Taylor MB, Geiger DA, Saker KE, Larson MM. Diffuse osteopenia and myelopathy in a puppy fed a diet composed of an organic premix and raw ground beef. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2009;234(8):1041-1048. doi:10.2460/javma.234.8.1041
9. ROUDEBUSH P, COWELL CS. Results of a Hypoallergenic Diet Survey of Veterinarians in North America with a Nutritional Evaluation of Homemade Diet Prescriptions. Vet Dermatol. 1992;3(1):23-28. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.1992.tb00139.x
10. Pedrinelli V, Gomes M de OS, Carciofi AC. Analysis of recipes of home-prepared diets for dogs and cats published in Portuguese. J Nutr Sci. 2017;6:e33. doi:10.1017/jns.2017.31
11. Oba PM, Utterback PL, Parsons CM, Swanson KS. True nutrient and amino acid digestibility of dog foods made with human-grade ingredients using the precision-fed cecectomized rooster assay1. Transl Anim Sci. 2020;4(1):442-451. doi:10.1093/tas/txz175
12. Do S, Phungviwatnikul T, de Godoy MRC, Swanson KS. Nutrient digestibility and fecal characteristics, microbiota, and metabolites in dogs fed human-grade foods. J Anim Sci. 2021;99(2). doi:10.1093/jas/skab028
13. Tanprasertsuk J, Perry LM, Tate DE, Honaker RW, Shmalberg J. Apparent total tract nutrient digestibility and metabolizable energy estimation in commercial fresh and extruded dry kibble dog foods. Transl Anim Sci. 2021;5(3). doi:10.1093/tas/txab071
14. Buff PR, Carter RA, Bauer JE, Kersey JH. Natural pet food: A review of natural diets and their impact on canine and feline physiology. J Anim Sci. 2014;92(9):3781-3791. doi:10.2527/jas.2014-7789
It absolutely makes sense to base things on evidence but like you mentioned, we will probably NEVER have the type of studies we need to really know if fresh food is better than kibble.
But we do have studies on other things like the fact that dogs ingest over a hundred times the amount of maillard reaction products than humans, which can have toxic and carcinogenic effects. And the fact that dogs on kibble and canned diets have extremely high levels of glyphosate in their urine (compared to none in dogs fed raw diets). We also know facts about the digestibility differences and microbiome effects of fresh vs kibble.
While we don’t have the absolute *best* evidence at this time, should we not be at least extrapolating the data that we do have? Or do we ignore these findings and say “eh, it’s fine”?
If we never question anything, we will never progress. And if we wait around for the solid evidence and refuse to extrapolate, well then we’re going to stay right where we are.
You are correct that we have to make decisions on the basis of the evidence we have, even if it is imperfect. However, we should also proportion our confidence in our conclusions to the strength of the evidence. When the evidence is weak, then we cannot make strong, confident claims, and we have to be ready to change our conclusions as the evidence changes.
Most of the concerns about conventional diets and the proposed benefits for fresh or raw diets are based on indirect evidence- rodent studies, pre-clinical pilot studies, nothing that directly demonstrates health effects, positive or negative. This level of evidence is reasonable for driving further research, but it is a shaky foundation for radical changes in feeding practices.
As far as some of the specifics you mention:
a. Maillard products or AGEs- These exist in all cooked food, with levels varying depending on the details of each diet and its processes. The evidence for toxic effects comes from rodent studies, and there are no direct data showing negative health effects in dogs from exposure in cooked foods. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t investigate or be concerned, but it does mean we shouldn’t recommend a radical change from diets with decades of experience and research evidence behind them to diets with mostly anecdote and very sparse, preliminary research evidence to support them.
b. glyphosphate- most evidence suggests very low toxicity potential in mammals, and no evidence at all for health risks to dogs from consumption of commercial diets. This is popular bogeyman right now, but the research is more reassuring than worrying.
c. digestibility- there are a few studies showing differences between cooked and uncooked diets, and cooking increases digestibility of some ingredients and reduces it for others. This only matters if the differences in digestibility lead to differences in calorie or nutrient adequacy, and this has not been shown to be the case. The fact that conventional diets almost certainly meet nutritional and caloric needs argues that this is not a difference with meaningful implications for health.
d. microbiome differences- again, a few studies show differences in the types of flora in dogs eating different diets. We know almost nothing about what this means or what health implications this has, if any.
I’m all for questioning things, but people who are concerned about conventional diets rarely turn the same level of critical scrutiny on claims for alternatives. When you do, you find that the evidence for these is much less robust, so there is a long way to go before we should be confidently saying that such diets have health benefits
Thanks for covering this. I’m now more curious to understand what it would take to see a at least one strong, comparative feeding study take place. Is it mostly cost that has prevented this from happening? Is anything else preventing it?
And maybe a better question… do you have a favorite feeding study or one that comes to mind when you think about quality feeding studies? It could be any, not necessarily involving fresh diets, because as you’ve said there aren’t many. I think it would be interesting to look at the history of high quality feeding studies and how they got there.
Great question! I suspect cost is a big factor. However, the reality is that it is easy to sell diets with marketing not based on scientific evidence because consumers don’t demand this, so there is no incentive to do such studies when it won’t increase sales. Grain-free diets, for example, have no proven benefits and possibly some risks, and yet they went from uncommon to 40% or more of the diets on the market entirely without any meaningful scientific evidence.
Nutrition is also complex. If you were, for example, to compare a fresh-cooked diet and a kibble, there would be dozens, if not hundreds of differences between them besides the degree of cooking/processing. How would you decide what factors were the critical ones responsible for any health differences? Even simple things like comparing the carbohydrate content of two diets can be really tricky since a low-carb diet is, by definition, either a high-protein or a high-fat diet, and which factor or what interaction between them gets the credit/blame for any differences seen in a study? So another barrier is that you can design a good study and spend a lot of time and money running it and still not have a definitive conclusion that will be persuasive to most people.
There have been some great feeding trials. Purina did a caloric restriction study in a group of labs that lasted for 14 years and generated incredibly valuable evidence about possible methods to reduce age-related disease and extend lifespan. I’m not sure what factors motivated them to do this, but it didn’t have any obvious or direct impact on revenue.
My guess is that the improvement in our knowledge about nutrition will come mostly from associational, epidemiological studies than from controlld clinical trials, even though these cannot proven causation. The Golden Retriever Lifetime Study, for example, will certainly collect information about diets, and some associations may be seen that can give some insight into dietary factors and health, though there will be lots of caveats and limitations to any conclusions.
In my fantasy world, all pet food companies over a certain size (TBD) would contribute to a communal research fund to be administered by an independent committee and taking grant applications fro nutritional research projects from academics not affiliated with specific companies. That would be great way to stimulate more and better studies. But it doesn’t seem likely to happen.
Dr. Skeptvet you have the patience of a saint.
Any idea where this sudden influx of hysteria about Maillard reaction came from? It’s being brought up on the regular by raw food acolytes. (Meaning, what holistic magazine/doggy “wellness” web site started this rumor that Maillard reaction = instant cancer? I have a guess, but wondering if you know for sure.)
It’s a great question, and I don’t know the answer. The reaction is ubiquitous in cooking, so why it is such a prominent villain when discussing commercial pet food is unclear.
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The emergence of the Maillard reaction and AGEs as an issue is due to more research coming out showing the links between AGEs and cancer. Just a few examples from the past few years are:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00217-019-03406-w
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2018.02088/full
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6146089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4745522/
It’s concerning that, given ultraprocessed foods make up 100% of the diet of most dogs, that this is dismissed so readily. Even moreso when we look at the ongoing research showing the benefits of fresh foods for humans, and the lack of evidence of the superiority of ultraprocessed diets for pets.
More research is certainly justified, but claims of health effects of these compounds in pet foods on dogs and cats need to be validated, not just assumed based on lab research or extrapolation from human snack foods with very different ingredient and nutrient profiles.
The first article you cite is about dried and toasted ingredients for cattle feed, so relevance to commercial pet foods is pretty questionable.
The second article also mostly concerns agricultural animals. The short section on pet foods concludes “Whether such absorbed dietary MRP affect the long term health of pet animals has, hitherto, not been studied.”
The third article is the same as the second.
The fourth article concerns humans and concludes “Maillard reaction products have both positive and negative impacts on health. Diverse MRPs act as antioxidants, bactericidal, antiallergenic, antibrowning, prooxidants, and carcinogens.”
This is an example of why conclusions about the health effects of MRPs and heating pet foods are not yet justified by actual data. I agree there is enough reason for concern to study the matter, but not to make claims about the nutritional or health benefits of one processing method over another.
If that’s what you have taken from them, I’d suggest you are heavily cherrypicking from those papers.
If you are choosing to ignore those bits and if you think you can conclude anything about the health impact of commercial pet foods from papers that say almost nothing about that, then there’s a bit of the pot calling the kettle black there.
Great post! It’s very rare to read something so reasonable about this topic. Normally, it’s just “Kibble is the worst thing in the world” versus “Fresh diets is the worst thing in the world”. It’s so boring, I don’t even bother to read it anymore. I feed my dog a balanced homemade cooked diet for many years now, just because the lack of strong evidence supporting either type of diet ends up favoring, in my opinion, the fresh diets. In the sense that, if the fresh diet is balanced and complete, it’s hard to picture why would it be worse than a commercial diet, with a fair possibility of it being better. So, at the worst scenario, it’s just the same as feeding kibble and I just wasted a lot of time cooking… 🙂
This whole topic is giving me ulcers. I have three med/small dogs. Two have behavioral challenges. I’ve always had multiple animals ranging from cats to cows to birds to fish. I’ve always tried to make the right choices for our pets. A few years ago, I had two dogs who struggled with weight, skin and tooth issues. I decided to switch them over to a well known fresh/frozen product. The changes in the two dogs health was immediate and significant. Both have thrived and have great vet checks and overall health positivity. Meanwhile, we have moved and changed vets and suddenly despite the personal evidence to the contrary, the new vet told us we could be killing our dogs by serving a “boutique” diet. I just can’t find/understand/navigate the extraordinary mixed bag of information and opinion. I just pray I’m doing right by them and wish there were more definitive answers and guidance, readily available in layman speak. I appreciated reading several of your posts and your viewpoints.
The two points I would make are
1. The psychological pressure we feel to pick the “right” food is excessive and unhelpful. There are many, many factors that affect the wellbeing of our pets, and diet is only one. Diet is important, but there are many “right” choices, only a few “wrong” choices, and our decisions almost never make or break our pets’ health. Humans make better decisions when not under stress, and the stress and anxiety that comes from believing there is a “right” answer to the question of what to feed only makes reasonable choices harder.
2. By the same token, there are many factors influencing health, and this makes our personal observations unreliable guides. The fact that your dogs did better after the diet change is great, but it may not mean what you think it does. The change could be related to any of a thousands differences between the food, not just the differences that we notice. The form (fresh versus kibble), for example, may not actually be the important thing. And it may not even be the diet change that made the difference. I know how hard that is to imagine since it seems so obvious, but a thousands things are happing in and around our pets all the time that influence their health, and we only see a few of them. We also put much more weight on the ones we can control, such as diet, even if they aren’t always the actually thing that makes a difference.
The concern about “boutique” diets came from some early analysis of reports to the FDA about heart problems and diet (see the posts here). It is turning out that the presence of pulses and absence of grains are probably more important than the ,amufacturer, though there is a lot we still don’t know. Again, I recommend avoiding grain-free diets for now, but I think it is excessive to say that “boutique” diets will kill your pet. I would take this with a grain of salt, just as I would take your own experience with your dogs.
Good luck!
Hi! Two years later and I stumbled across your site trying to look for information on nutrition for my puppy. Balancing the gut feel that fresh seems like it should be better based on it being better for humans, with the lack of scientific research to clearly support it. You posted this two years ago – has anything new come out research wise re fresh diets? Thanks!!
I haven’t seen any compelling research either way with regard to fresh-cooked diets. Most of the research seems to focus on raw diets, and I have covered that in other articles (Bottome Line-It isn’t truly supportive of benefits greater than risks, though the evidence is still quite limited).
I feed WSAVA compliant kibble. I fed raw before that. I notice no difference. I wanna say their fur is not as clean smelling but not sure if that’s related to food. Some say that certain kibbles makes their dogs smell more, though. Maybe there’s something to it. Anyways, I digress. Even though I do stick to the science I can’t help but wonder why you’re so immensely skeptical about anecdotes like the one presented by Just A Dog Mom. If you feed kibble after kibble and your dogs have issues and all of sudden they don’t when you feed them Whole Foods then that’s it for me. I don’t need to know more. You’re trying to make this about 1000 other factors. Really? So she tries multiple kibble formulations and all the 1000 other factors don’t play an important role. But when she has success with a fresh diet then all of a sudden it could be due to 1000 other factors?
It’s obvious that there is something in all kibble formulations (probably chemicals from baking or maybe it’s the vitamins that are added which we know are different in chemical structure from vitamins and minerals thet come in actual Whole Foods) that must have caused a reaction in her dogs. Just like when I take a vitamin b complex I get acne and rashes. But when I eat a high amount of the foods that contain the same b vitamins I don’t get acne or rashes. I guess it could be 1000 other factors?
Look, I love science. But we use science to make money. And that’s the issue. Instead of formulating dog foods that make our dogs thrive we formulate dog foods that are safe. And this way you can use ingredients that are cheap but safe since the science shows that just because it’s cheap or sounds questionable doesn’t mean it’s not safe. But I don’t want just safe for my dogs. I want optimal for my dogs.
The way I look at it is simple. A dog is just like a human, a mammal. A real living being. We are all stardust. We are literally part of the universe. We need what nature gave us to evolve in the first place. So why the heck do we use our brain power to prove that unnatural foods don’t cause any harm when we could just eat or feed our animals the way nature intended for them eat? I just don’t get it. Dogs may not be wolves but just like we eat and need a lot of the same foods that our distant relatives eat, dogs need to eat a lot of the same things that wolves eat. And that’s where we should start an investigate what other foods they need that wolves don’t need and add that to their diets
to make them optimal. And we could easily do that with fresh foods like we do for humans. But instead we use the science to show that our desire to use cheap ingredients and fillers are actually safe for the dog. The whole premise is wrong.
Please address the comment from Chris, 11/19/2023. It has many of the questions or ideas many want & need to know. I would consider your response to be a scientific, valid answer to explore. And I truly appreciate your fairness in posting replies that may differ from your considerations. And thank you Chris ! TY
Honestly, there aren’t really substantive points in that comment to address, other than a few I have talked about already many times. Chris’ post was not a scientific one but simply an expression of his beliefs, and there isn’t much there to “rebut” with scientific evidence. Here are a few examples.
1. Why distrust anecdotes as a source of evidence- Here are links to previous articles (and a bit of humor) explaining this. The bottom line is that anecdotes are psychologically compelling without being reliable reflections of true cause/effect relationships, and that is an established fact of life despite being hard to accept. Why Anecdotes Can’t be Trusted
2. We use science to make money and dog foods are just formulated to be safe not healthy-Simply not accurate. Decades of legitimate scientific research has gone into determining the nutritional needs of dogs and fomrulating diets to meet them. These are certainly not perfect diets (there probably is no such thing), but there is far more evidence supporting their use than most of the alternatives currently being promoted.
3. the rest of the comment is just the fallacy that whatever Chris or someone else considers “natural” (a term vague to the point of meaninglessness) must be healthier than what they consider “unnatural.” This is a classic logical fallacy that ignores the arbitrariness of what we choose to define as “natural” and mythologizes a fantasy about a benign and healthful natural state that has never existed. Animals in nature eat what they can get, not an “optimal” diet, and they often suffer from malnutrition, parasitism, infectious diseases, and many other health problems associated with their diet that “artificial” things like cooking and micronutrient supplementation help us avoid.
JFFD claims the pet food industry isn’t regulated as well as the human food industry. Part of their pitch is that they’re sourcing their food from restaurant suppliers, whereas Big Kibble™ is sourcing their food from the same suppliers that produce animal feed. I’m not a rocket surgeon, but that argument makes sense to me. Is there merit to those claims?
There are differences in regulation for human and pet food, but than a lot of the people who complain about commercial diets also promote raw foods, which are a much. bigger health risk than what is allowed under the pet food regulations, so there is some major inconsistency there.
The FDA regulations for pet food state that, “all animal foods, like human foods, be safe to eat, produced under sanitary conditions, contain no harmful substances, and be truthfully labeled.: Details may differ, but that doesn’t imply a lower standard for safety. It is also worth pointing out that human food safety regulations are not perfect, and foodborne illness outbreaks are not uncommon.
When companies like JFFD imply that they are providing safer food based on sourcing ingredients that are “human grade,” this is not a claim by actual evidence of differences in safety incidence relative to the number of dogs eating their food vs conventional alternatives. No food is perfectly safe, and the risk for all commercial foods is very low. Whether there is any difference in risk between JFFD and their competitors is unknown, but it is unlikely that the sourcing of ingredients makes much difference.
“So, is it crazy to wonder if fresh foods really are healthier than canned or kibble? Can we assume that dogs eating traditional commercial diets will have shorter lives and more health problems than dogs eating fresh diets? Regular readers of this column will already know my answer—nope! ”
So you don’t think that dogs fed a raw diet tend to need a vet much less than a dog fed kibble or canned?
There is no evidence at all to suggest that, apart from the opinion and belief of raw-food advocates, which is obviously not objective. Personally, I think fresh cooke diets may have benefits, but that is not yet proven. If so, raw diets could have some of the same benefits, but they also have risks that would potentially offset these. Either way, we need data, and right now it doesn’t exist.
Dr. Arthur Malernee
@artmalernee
what proof do we have that fresh ingredents grown locally is healthier
Grok
@grok
There is a mix of evidence supporting the idea that fresh ingredients grown locally are healthier. A study highlighted by @DZBillFulton mentioned that locally grown heirloom tomatoes have more vitamins and better flavor than their conventional cousins (tweet on 2023-10-09). This suggests that locally grown produce may offer superior nutritional value compared to their non-local counterparts.
Additionally, @renie_rachel shared a personal observation that a restaurant salad with locally grown ingredients was fresher and more nutritionally competent than imported produce (tweet on 2023-03-19). This anecdotal evidence aligns with the broader argument for the health benefits of locally grown food.
Another tweet by @OrganicConsumer (2017-01-22) pointed out that a hospital in Pennsylvania’s unhealthiest county began offering patients fresh, organic food harvested from its own garden. This initiative implies that locally grown, fresh, and organic food is considered beneficial for health.
While these tweets provide some evidence of the health benefits of locally grown fresh ingredients, it’s also essential to consider that not all locally grown foods are automatically healthier. For example, a tweet by @SeaBreezeFood (2013-04-25) simply announced the availability of local watermelons, emphasizing their freshness and sustainability, but did not directly discuss their nutritional superiority.
In conclusion, while some evidence and anecdotal accounts suggest that fresh ingredients grown locally are healthier due to potentially higher nutritional content, more research is needed to establish a conclusive link.
I always wondered if I ate purina people chow would that be better for me than my diet. we do have prospective trials that show UPF are not healty at least in humans and dog chow is considered probably a upf at least by the chatbots.
if there was something for humans like there is for pets that is promoted to be complete and balanced like dog chow would that be a upf
Grok
@grok
If there was a human equivalent of dog chow that is promoted as a complete and balanced diet, it would likely be classified as a highly processed food product. Such a product would be formulated to meet all the nutritional needs of humans, similar to how dog chow is formulated to meet the nutritional needs of dogs. However, the concept of a single food product being able to provide all the nutrients necessary for a human diet is controversial. Humans have complex nutritional needs that are best met through a varied diet that includes a wide range of whole foods, rather than relying on a single processed food product.
I’ve also noticed that their Facebook ads. It’s all like a script that just food for dogs feeds to the people who are doing testimonials. If their dog food is so good then why are all the people saying the same thing?