Comment by Loma Linda University Adventist Health Sciences Center

Academic health sciences center affiliated with Loma Linda University
Eating eggs might do more than just start your day—it could help protect your brain. Researchers found that people 65 and older who eat eggs regularly have a significantly lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, with daily or near-daily consumption linked to up to a 27% reduction. Even modest egg intake showed benefits, suggesting that small dietary changes could make a meaningful difference over time.
AI Verified (May 7, 2026)
Like Share on X 1h ago
Policy proposals and claims
votes For
Statement relation verification history AI Verified Report this

Statement relation comments

AI Verified Relevant: the quote gives a specific health benefit from egg consumption (lower Alzheimer’s risk in adults 65+) and the source explicitly frames eggs as supporting brain health and as part of a healthy diet. That narrower positive-health argument makes support for the broader claim that eggs are net-beneficial food substantially more likely, even though it does not itself prove the full general-population claim. ([sciencedaily.com](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/05/260506225214.htm)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago
Vote inference verification history AI Verified Report this

Vote answer comments

AI Verified The quote frames eggs as beneficial—regular intake could "help protect your brain," was linked to a "significantly lower risk" of Alzheimer’s, and even modest intake "showed benefits." The source page also says "research supports eggs as part of a healthy diet." That is broader than the specific older-adult study, so the general-population claim is an inference, but it clearly points toward support rather than opposition. ([sciencedaily.com](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/05/260506225214.htm)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago

Quote authenticity verification history

Report this

Quote authenticity comments

AI Verified Verified: the exact quote appears verbatim in the ScienceDaily page’s Summary, and that same page lists the source as Loma Linda University Adventist Health Sciences Center with date May 7, 2026; its citation block also credits that organization as the author. The linked Loma Linda University Health news release corroborates the underlying study and attribution. ([sciencedaily.com](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/05/260506225214.htm)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago
replying to Loma Linda University Adventist Health Sciences Center