By Michael J. Critelli | MakeUsWell Newsletter,
Within the next two weeks, we will begin inviting some of you to use our new food intelligence product. Over the past several months, we have been exploring a deceptively simple question: why is it so hard for people to know whether the foods and beverages they consume are actually helping them?
The answer is that nutrition is not one decision. It is a chain of decisions, conditions, and uncertainties. A food or beverage does not have a single fixed value for every person in every circumstance. Its effect depends on where it came from, how it was grown or produced, how it traveled, how it was stored, how it was prepared, what else we consumed with it, and what was happening inside our bodies and minds at the moment we ate or drank it.
There are thousands of nutrition apps, food-rating systems, calorie counters, ingredient scanners, and diet programs. Many are useful. But the next generation of food intelligence must be more ambitious, combining artificial intelligence with human judgment, personal memory, and disciplined evidence review.