Why Nutrition is Critical for You and the Planet
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Health News Update: Why Nutrition is Critical for You and the Planet 3.9.26
Hello everyone: I bet we are all grateful that the ice has finally gone away, yet some issues definitely linger. I want to share some important information that is kept out of the major media spotlight, and I hope that this explains why your nutrition matters…a lot.
Today, food and healthcare operate independently. The food sector has been engineered to deliver low-cost, high-calorie foods at industrial scale, while the healthcare sector has been designed to treat illness after diagnosis. Public policy has reinforced this separation, with the U.S. effectively subsidizing both cheap calories through agricultural and food system incentives and rising healthcare costs through public and employer-based spending. While each sector has advanced in its own right, the lack of a meaningful conductor between the two has produced unchecked interplay. Poor nutrition is a leading contributor to preventable disease, yet nutrition is minimally incorporated into healthcare. The metabolic health of America is bleak with one in two adults having either diabetes or prediabetes, while 14 in 15 have suboptimal cardiometabolic health.
This system appears to be as effective as it is cheap as U.S. healthcare spending hit $5.3 trillion in 2024 and is projected to grow to $8.6 trillion by 2033. In terms of U.S. GDP, this represents growth from 18% to 20.3%. The rapid adoption of GLP‑1 therapies underscores both the scale of metabolic dysfunction and the willingness of payers, employers, and consumers to invest in interventions that address diet-related disease; however, these drugs also highlight the absence of a complementary nutrition layer needed to sustain long-term outcomes. As diet continues to fuel epidemics of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer, the question is whether upstream nutrition solutions can bend the healthcare cost curve or whether the U.S. economy will remain locked into financing downstream treatment.
Bridging the food and healthcare sectors represents a powerful lever for systemic change and allows entrepreneurs and operators to build investable business by integrating food and nutrition to drive measurable health outcomes. Notably, the foods most consistently linked to improved health outcomes tend to carry the lowest environmental impact, revealing an opportunity to align better nutrition with lower system-wide strain. Reframing nutrition through a health lens has the potential to address three interconnected challenges at once: rising healthcare costs, deteriorating public health, and mounting environmental pressure.
Bottom Line: Rather than participate in this pandemic of chronic disease and the downward spiral of health for the individual and the planet, you can opt out and support recovery simply by going to a predominantly plant-based food plan. We are not powerless, and such a shift is the foundation of rebuilding our health and our world…one person at a time. It really cannot happen any other way and the benefits to you and our future generations are enormous. Where can you start? You can begin by shifting to the Green Mediterranean food plan that I have outlined in previous blogs, or you can do some online searching to start saving your own life by increasing your health span and lifespan. Whatever you choose to do, now is the time to participate. Thank you.




