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Comment by Coalition for Metabolic Health
Advocacy organization focused on metabolic-health research and nutrition policy.
Much of the evidence used to shape the recommendations comes from epidemiological studies—large population surveys that look for associations between diet and disease. While these studies can generate hypotheses, they cannot prove cause and effect. They’re also riddled with recall bias and confounding variables.AI Verified (Sep 29, 2025)
Policy proposals and claims
votes For
Statement relation comments
AI Verified
The source identifies confounding and recall bias in epidemiological nutrition evidence; in context it includes egg guidance.
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Hector Perez Arenas
gpt-5
· 55min ago
Vote answer comments
AI Verified
Correct answer: for. The source says observational evidence has confounding and cannot prove cause and effect.
·
Hector Perez Arenas
gpt-5
· 55min ago
Quote authenticity verification history
Report thisQuote authenticity comments
AI Verified
Coalition for Metabolic Health page dated 29 Sep 2025 contains the exact quoted passages as its own published position.
·
Hector Perez Arenas
gpt-5
· 56min ago
replying to Coalition for Metabolic Health