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    Home»F&B»Standing with science when nutrition goes viral
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    Standing with science when nutrition goes viral

    Consumer interest in health and wellness has surged through social media which can be confusing or misleading. Science-based nutrition advice remains essential.
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    Published March 26, 2026

    By Christian Philippsen, managing director, BENEO Asia

    Food & Beverage Industry News


    Image: LEDOMSTOCK/shutterstock.com

    Spend just a few minutes on social media and it becomes clear: everyone has an opinion about nutrition. One post warns against carbohydrates, another calls them essential. A new “superfood” is celebrated one week and forgotten the next. For people trying to make healthy choices, this is confusing and often misleading.

    This is why the message behind World Health Day 2026 – “Together for health. Stand with science.” – feels especially relevant. It calls on society to rely on evidence-based guidance at a time when information spreads faster than scientific validation. Nutrition is one of the clearest examples of where this matters. Diet influences metabolic health, immunity, and long term disease risk, making credible, science based nutrition advice essential.

    When nutrition trends outpace science

    Consumer interest in health and wellness has surged. People seek foods that support digestive wellbeing, immunity, and overall vitality. At the same time, new research on the gut microbiome has expanded understanding of how diet shapes health.

    But social media spreads ideas far faster than science can substantiate them. A preliminary finding or anecdotal claim can quickly go viral. Scientific understanding, by contrast, builds slowly through decades of trials, reviews, and consensus. This deliberate process is what gives scientific guidance its reliability. Standing with science means recognising that credible nutrition advice must follow evidence, not trends.

    Why clear scientific definitions matter

    Digestive health is one of today’s most discussed nutrition topics. Growing interest in the gut microbiome has led many consumers to look for ingredients that support beneficial bacteria. Prebiotics are a good example. Although many fibres are marketed this way, not all meet the scientific definition.

    A true prebiotic must be selectively used by beneficial microorganisms and deliver a proven health benefit. Scientific checklists exist to ensure clarity: the ingredient must be well defined, show selective fermentation, demonstrate safety, and provide evidence of benefits in humans. These criteria prevent broad marketing interpretations from diluting trust.

    Chicory root fibre

    Chicory root fibre, specifically inulin and oligofructose, is one of the most studied prebiotic fibres. Decades of research, including hundreds of human clinical trials, show that it is selectively fermented by beneficial bacteria such as bifidobacteria and supports digestive function. Its consistent results across studies make it a benchmark example of how rigorous science translates into effective, reliable nutrition solutions.

    As interest in digestive health grows, more products highlight “prebiotic” claims. While this can help consumers make informed choices, it only works when labels stay aligned with scientific standards. Broad or inaccurate definitions risk confusing shoppers and diminishing trust in nutrition science.

    Standing with science

    Supporting science in nutrition does not mean rejecting innovation. It means ensuring that new discoveries, product development, and communication all rest on a foundation of robust evidence. In a world full of conflicting advice about what to eat, standing with science ensures consumers receive reliable guidance that genuinely supports long term health.

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