Consumers are confused aboutwhat foods aregood fordigestive health, a new survey by consultancy New Nutrition Business reveals. The number of people who believe bread, meat and milk are good for digestion is almost equal to the number of people who believe theyare bad.
The survey asked3,000 people from the UK, Australia, Spain, Brazil and the USto rank some common foods as good or bad for their gut health.
While 38% of respondents singled out bread as the key culprit behind gastrointestinal distress, 24% said it wasgood for digestive wellness.
And despite kefir and fermented vegetables being hypedas gut health heroes, more people believed bread was good for digestion than believed kefir (17.6%) or fermented vegetables (15.8%) weregood.
Consumers are just as divided over the gut health benefits of milk and meat.
•Nearly half of those surveyed, 46.6%, believed dairy milk was good for digestive health, while 30.6% thought milk was bad for their digestion.
•Just over half, 55%,said they choose lactose-free foods for their digestive health (although only 15% claim to be lactose-intolerant).
•For meat, 27% of respondents said it was good for digestive wellness, while 33% believed it was bad.
“Contradictory consumer beliefs aboutwhich foods are good or bad for digestive healthindicate how strongly attitudes about food and health are fragmented,” says Joana Maricato, research manager at New Nutrition Business. “Most people are adopting a wide variety of behaviours in relation to diet and health.”
This is a result of growing mistrust in official dietary guidelines, according to Maricato, and people’sdesire to take back control of their diets. “Changes in dietary advice over the past 15 years have created consumer scepticism about the “expert” opinions of dieticians and nutrition researchers, just at the moment that technology has made it easier for people to find dietary information for themselves,” Maricato adds.
Most respondents, 76%, said they thought messages about diet and health were confusing. Asked where theylearn about healthy eating and diet, most said they searched online and read blogs, while only 28% asked a nutritionist ora dietician.