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Is Your Diet Setting You Up for Chronic Illness? Prevent and Reduce Disease Risk

April 21, 2026
in Article, chronic, chronic conditions, chronic illness, diet, Diet Quality, food as medicine, risk assessment
Is Your Diet Setting You Up for Chronic Illness? Prevent and Reduce Disease Risk

Written & Supervised By

Preventive Medicine and Public Health Specialist | 40+ Years Experience

Medically Reviewed

Dr. Jose Rossello, MD, PhD, MHCM

Preventive Medicine & Public Health Specialist

Last Reviewed: April 21, 2026

What you eat today shapes your health for years to come. A poor diet ranks among the top risk factors for chronic diseases like heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer, with research showing that adherence to healthy dietary patterns can reduce chronic disease risk[1] by 20-42% compared to unhealthy eating habits. The connection between nutrition and long-term health outcomes is clear and well-documented across decades of scientific study.

Most people don’t realize their daily food choices actively contribute to or protect against chronic illness. Tobacco use, poor nutrition, physical inactivity, and excessive alcohol use[2] make up the short list of major chronic disease risk factors. Among these, diet stands out as something everyone can control and modify at any time.

Understanding which eating patterns increase disease risk and which ones offer protection gives people the power to make informed choices. The latest research reveals specific dietary approaches that significantly lower the chances of developing major chronic conditions, and these patterns share core principles that anyone can follow.

Table of Contents

    • Key Takeaways
  • How Diet Influences Chronic Illness Risk
    • The Science Linking Diet and Disease
    • Key Chronic Diseases Related to Diet
    • Role of Inflammation and Insulin Resistance
  • High-Risk Dietary Patterns and Their Impact
    • Inflammatory and Insulinemic Diets
    • Dietary Risk Factors for Major Chronic Diseases
    • Ultra-Processed and High-Sodium Foods
  • Healthy Dietary Patterns for Prevention
    • The Mediterranean Diet
    • Plant-Based and High-Fiber Diets
    • DASH and Other Evidence-Based Diets
  • Assessing and Improving Your Eating Patterns
    • Evaluating Your Current Diet
    • Practical Steps to Enhance Diet Quality
    • Role of Nutrition Education and Dietary Guidelines
  • Lifestyle Factors Beyond Diet
    • The Synergy of Diet, Exercise, and Sleep
    • Physical Activity and Healthy Weight
    • Impact of Beverage Choices
  • Tracking Progress: Research, Cohorts, and Assessments
    • How Dietary Patterns Are Studied
    • Key Cohort Studies and Findings
    • Important Dietary Assessment Tools
  • Frequency Asked Questions
    • What are the five predominant diet-related chronic diseases?
    • How can proper nutrition aid in the prevention of chronic illnesses?
    • What is the connection between dietary habits and the development of chronic diseases?
    • Which foods should be avoided to reduce the risk of diet-related chronic conditions?
    • How has the DASH diet been shown to impact chronic disease management?
    • Which new demographics have been addressed in the latest dietary guidelines for disease prevention?
  • References

Key Takeaways

  • Poor dietary choices rank among the leading causes of chronic diseases including heart disease, diabetes, and cancer
  • Following healthy eating patterns can reduce chronic disease risk by up to 42% compared to unhealthy diets
  • Specific dietary approaches that reduce inflammation and insulin spikes offer the strongest protection against chronic illness

How Diet Influences Chronic Illness Risk

A close-up view of fresh fruits and vegetables on one side and processed fast food on the other, displayed on a wooden table.

Poor nutrition creates biological conditions that raise the risk of multiple chronic diseases, while healthy dietary patterns can lower the risk[3] of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain cancers through reduced inflammation and improved metabolic health.

The Science Linking Diet and Disease

Large-scale epidemiology studies have tracked thousands of people over many years to understand how diet affects disease risk. Research following 121,513 participants found that people who ate healthier diets had lower rates of heart disease, diabetes, and many other chronic conditions. The study showed that adherence to healthy dietary patterns was associated with lower risk[3] across 48 different chronic diseases.

The Mediterranean diet pattern showed particularly strong protective effects. For each improvement in diet quality, people experienced a 6% lower risk of cardiovascular disease and a 4% lower risk of hypertension.

Scientists also found that dietary patterns influence chronic disease through multiple mechanisms[4], including effects on body weight, blood sugar control, and inflammation levels. These patterns work better than focusing on single foods because they capture how different nutrients interact in the body.

Key Chronic Diseases Related to Diet

Cardiovascular disease represents one of the strongest diet-disease connections. Poor eating habits contribute to high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, and arterial damage that leads to heart attacks and strokes.

Type 2 diabetes develops when cells become resistant to insulin, often triggered by excess weight and poor diet quality. People following anti-inflammatory eating patterns had an 11% lower diabetes risk compared to those with less healthy diets.

Cancer risk also responds to dietary choices. Research shows links between nutrition and chronic disease prevention[5] for lung cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer, and esophageal cancer.

Digestive disorders, liver disease, respiratory conditions, and even brain diseases like dementia show connections to diet quality. Studies found that healthy eating patterns reduced risk of depression, Parkinson’s disease, and cognitive decline.

Role of Inflammation and Insulin Resistance

Chronic inflammation in the body acts as a bridge between poor diet and disease development. Foods high in sugar, refined grains, and unhealthy fats trigger inflammatory responses that damage blood vessels and organs over time.

Insulin resistance occurs when cells stop responding properly to insulin signals. This forces the pancreas to produce more insulin, creating a cycle that leads to prediabetes and eventually type 2 diabetes. Excess body weight from poor nutrition accelerates this glucose-insulin dysregulation.

Obesity itself promotes both inflammation and insulin resistance, creating a dangerous combination. Fat tissue, especially around the abdomen, releases inflammatory chemicals that interfere with normal metabolism. Most people in the United States consume too much sodium, saturated fat, and sugar[6], increasing their risk of these metabolic problems.

Breaking this cycle requires dietary changes that reduce inflammatory triggers and improve insulin sensitivity. Plant-based foods, whole grains, and healthy fats help restore normal metabolic function.

High-Risk Dietary Patterns and Their Impact

A close-up of a kitchen table filled with greasy fast food, sugary drinks, processed snacks, and wilted vegetables, highlighting unhealthy dietary choices.

Certain eating patterns trigger biological processes that significantly raise the risk of developing multiple chronic conditions. Research comparing dietary patterns for chronic disease prevention[1] shows that foods promoting inflammation and insulin spikes create the most health problems.

Inflammatory and Insulinemic Diets

Diets high in refined carbohydrates, red meat, and processed foods trigger chronic inflammation in the body. The reversed empirical dietary inflammatory pattern (rEDIP) measures how much a diet reduces inflammation markers in the blood.

People with low inflammatory diets had a 39% lower risk of developing major chronic diseases compared to those with high inflammatory eating patterns. The reversed empirical dietary index for hyperinsulinemia (rEDIH) tracks foods that cause insulin spikes. Low insulinemic diets showed even better results, with a 42% risk reduction.

These dietary scores matter because they predict actual disease outcomes. High dietary inflammatory index scores link directly to obesity, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Foods that spike insulin repeatedly contribute to weight gain and insulin resistance over time.

Dietary Risk Factors for Major Chronic Diseases

The Diabetes Risk Reduction Diet (DRRD) identifies specific eating patterns that either protect against or promote diabetes development. Poor diet quality contributes to 11 million deaths globally each year[7].

Key risk factors include:

  • High intake of red and processed meats
  • Regular consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages
  • Low fiber intake from whole grains and vegetables
  • Excessive saturated fat consumption
  • Minimal fruit and vegetable intake

People following the DRRD closely had a 30% lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer combined. Diet quality affects disease risk across different ethnic groups and both sexes equally.

Ultra-Processed and High-Sodium Foods

Ultra-processed foods contain additives, preservatives, and artificial ingredients that harm metabolic health. These foods make up over half of daily calories for many Americans.

High sodium intake from processed foods raises blood pressure and increases hypertension risk. Most dietary sodium comes from packaged foods rather than table salt. Excess sodium also promotes fluid retention and strains the cardiovascular system.

Adverse dietary patterns[4] rich in ultra-processed items lack the antioxidants, fiber, and healthy fats found in whole foods. The combination of high sodium, added sugars, and unhealthy fats in these products creates multiple pathways to chronic disease.

Healthy Dietary Patterns for Prevention

A close-up of a bowl of fresh mixed salad with colorful vegetables, grains, nuts, and seeds on a wooden table.

Research shows that several eating patterns can lower the risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer by 20-40%. The most protective diets share common features: they emphasize whole plant foods, limit processed items, and focus on nutrient density rather than strict food rules.

The Mediterranean Diet

The Mediterranean diet consistently ranks among the most studied and effective eating patterns for disease prevention. This approach centers on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and olive oil as a primary fat source. Fish and poultry appear in moderate amounts, while red meat is limited.

Studies using the Alternate Mediterranean Diet (AMED) scoring system[1] have found that people who follow this pattern most closely reduce their risk of major chronic diseases by up to 30%. The diet provides high amounts of fiber, antioxidants, and healthy fats while keeping inflammation low. Research tracking over 200,000 healthcare professionals for 32 years showed that the AMED was particularly effective at preventing cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

The key components include:

  • Daily consumption of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and healthy fats
  • Regular intake of beans, nuts, and seeds
  • Weekly servings of fish and seafood
  • Limited amounts of dairy, eggs, and poultry
  • Rare consumption of red meat and sweets

Plant-Based and High-Fiber Diets

Plant-based eating patterns that prioritize whole foods offer significant protection against chronic illness. The Healthful Plant-Based Diet Index (hPDI) measures not just plant food intake but also the quality of those choices. This distinction matters because refined grains and sugary foods are technically plant-based but don’t provide health benefits.

Research demonstrates that higher hPDI scores correlate with lower rates of heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers. The protective effect comes from multiple factors: high fiber content, phytonutrients, and minimal saturated fat. Dietary patterns associated with lower inflammation and insulin response[8] show the strongest disease prevention benefits.

Fiber plays a central role in these diets. It helps control blood sugar, reduces cholesterol, supports healthy gut bacteria, and promotes feelings of fullness. Adults should aim for 25-35 grams of fiber daily from sources like vegetables, fruits, legumes, and intact whole grains.

DASH and Other Evidence-Based Diets

The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet was originally designed to lower blood pressure but has proven effective for broader chronic disease prevention. This pattern emphasizes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy while limiting sodium, saturated fat, and added sugars.

The DASH diet reduces the risk of major chronic diseases[9] when followed consistently over time. It shares similarities with other evidence-based patterns but places particular emphasis on sodium reduction and adequate mineral intake.

The Alternate Healthy Eating Index (AHEI-2010) represents another validated tool for measuring diet quality. This scoring system evaluates intake of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, nuts, and healthy fats while tracking consumption of red meat, sugar-sweetened beverages, and sodium. Studies show that people in the highest AHEI-2010 category have approximately 20% lower risk of major chronic diseases compared to those in the lowest category.

These patterns work because they share fundamental principles: they prioritize nutrient-dense whole foods over processed options and provide balanced nutrition without extreme restrictions.

Assessing and Improving Your Eating Patterns

A wooden table displaying fresh vegetables on one side and processed foods on the other, illustrating a contrast between healthy and unhealthy eating choices.

Understanding where your current diet stands and taking concrete steps to improve it can significantly reduce chronic disease risk. Nutrition education and evidence-based dietary guidelines provide the framework needed to make lasting changes.

Evaluating Your Current Diet

A person needs to know what they’re actually eating before they can make improvements. Tracking food intake for several days gives a clear picture of current habits.

The Healthy Eating Index[10] measures how well an eating pattern aligns with federal recommendations. This dietary score examines components like whole grains, fruits, vegetables, proteins, and added sugars.

Key areas to assess include:

  • Daily servings of fruits and vegetables
  • Types of grains consumed (whole vs. refined)
  • Protein sources (plant-based vs. animal-based)
  • Added sugar intake
  • Sodium levels
  • Saturated fat consumption

Comprehensive nutritional assessments[11] can identify deficiencies and support personalized nutrition plans. Many people discover they consume more processed foods and fewer plant foods than they realized. Writing down meals and snacks reveals patterns that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Practical Steps to Enhance Diet Quality

Small, specific changes add up to significant improvements in diet quality. Starting with one or two modifications makes the process less overwhelming.

Replace refined grains with whole grains at one meal per day. Add an extra serving of vegetables to lunch or dinner. Choose water instead of sugary drinks.

Actionable dietary improvements:

  • Breakfast: Switch from sugary cereal to oatmeal with berries
  • Lunch: Add a side salad or vegetable soup
  • Dinner: Fill half the plate with vegetables
  • Snacks: Choose nuts, fruits, or vegetables over chips or cookies

Focusing on basic nutrition principles[12] works better than following restrictive fad diets. Gradual changes stick better than dramatic overhauls. A person can adopt healthier eating patterns without eliminating entire food groups or feeling deprived.

Role of Nutrition Education and Dietary Guidelines

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans[1] recommend several healthy eating patterns, including Mediterranean-style, vegetarian, and DASH diets. These guidelines help people understand what constitutes a balanced diet.

Nutrition education teaches individuals how to read food labels, plan meals, and make informed choices. Healthcare providers can use validated nutrition counseling frameworks[13] to help patients adopt healthier habits.

The guidelines emphasize eating patterns rather than isolated nutrients. This approach recognizes that food-based dietary patterns[9] affect chronic disease risk more than single foods or nutrients. Learning to build meals around vegetables, whole grains, and lean proteins creates a sustainable framework for long-term health.

Lifestyle Factors Beyond Diet

While what someone eats plays a major role in chronic disease risk, other daily habits work together with nutrition to either protect health or increase vulnerability to illness. Exercise routines, sleep quality, and what people drink all influence how the body responds to dietary choices.

The Synergy of Diet, Exercise, and Sleep

Lifestyle factors work together[14] to prevent or promote chronic diseases. When someone eats well but skips exercise or gets poor sleep, they miss important protective benefits. The body needs all three elements functioning properly.

Research shows that combining healthy eating with regular physical activity produces better health outcomes than either habit alone. Sleep quality affects how the body processes nutrients and regulates hunger hormones. People who sleep less than seven hours per night often struggle more with weight management, even when following a good diet.

Stress management also connects these lifestyle factors. High stress levels can disrupt sleep patterns, trigger unhealthy food choices, and reduce motivation for physical activity. This creates a cycle that increases risk for conditions like high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes.

Physical Activity and Healthy Weight

Physical inactivity contributes significantly[15] to chronic disease development alongside poor nutrition. Regular movement helps maintain healthy weight, improves insulin sensitivity, and reduces inflammation throughout the body.

Exercise doesn’t require intense gym sessions to be effective. Moderate activities like brisk walking for 30 minutes most days provide substantial health benefits. For people who are overweight, combining increased physical activity with dietary improvements produces better weight loss results than diet changes alone.

Movement also helps prevent muscle loss that often accompanies weight reduction efforts. Maintaining muscle mass supports metabolism and makes long-term weight management more sustainable.

Impact of Beverage Choices

What people drink matters as much as what they eat when considering chronic disease risk. Sweetened beverages like soda, fruit drinks, and specialty coffees add significant calories without providing satiety or nutritional value.

A single 20-ounce soda contains about 65 grams of sugar, exceeding daily recommended limits in one serving. Regular consumption of these drinks associates strongly with weight gain, type 2 diabetes, and fatty liver disease. Even fruit juice, while containing some vitamins, lacks the fiber of whole fruit and delivers concentrated sugar.

Water remains the best beverage choice for most people. Unsweetened coffee and tea also fit into healthy patterns. For those trying to reduce sweetened beverage intake, gradually replacing them with flavored water or diluted juice can ease the transition.

Tracking Progress: Research, Cohorts, and Assessments

Scientists use large-scale studies and specific assessment tools to understand how eating habits affect long-term health. These research methods track thousands of people over many years and measure everything from food intake to biomarkers of inflammation.

How Dietary Patterns Are Studied

Researchers examine diet and disease connections primarily through prospective cohort studies. These studies follow large groups of healthy people for decades to see who develops chronic illnesses.

A prospective cohort study tracks participants forward in time rather than looking backward at past behaviors. Scientists collect detailed information about what people eat at the start and then follow up regularly to record health outcomes.

Statistical analysis[16] helps researchers calculate the hazard ratio, which shows how much a specific dietary pattern increases or decreases disease risk. A hazard ratio below 1.0 means lower risk, while above 1.0 indicates higher risk.

Research teams evaluate both all-cause mortality and cause-specific mortality. This approach reveals whether certain eating patterns reduce death from any cause or specifically from conditions like heart disease or cancer.

Key Cohort Studies and Findings

The Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health manages several major nutrition studies. The Nurses’ Health Study started in 1976 with over 120,000 female nurses. The Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) launched in 1986 with more than 50,000 male health professionals.

NHS II began in 1989 with younger nurses to study health across different life stages. These three cohorts have produced thousands of research papers on diet and disease.

Studies using these cohorts found that higher quality dietary patterns reduced mortality[16] by up to 24 percent. Mediterranean diet, plant-based eating, and similar patterns all showed protective effects against diabetes, heart disease, and certain cancers.

Important Dietary Assessment Tools

Traditional dietary assessment methods[17] include food records, 24-hour recalls, and food frequency questionnaires. The food frequency questionnaire asks participants how often they eat specific foods over weeks or months.

Digital tools now make tracking easier through smartphone apps and online platforms. These methods help researchers collect more accurate data from participants.

Scientists also use objective biomarkers to validate what people report eating. Blood and urine tests can detect specific nutrients and compounds from foods. Some researchers examine gut microbiome diversity as another marker of diet quality.

Dietary biomarkers provide objective evaluation[16] of nutrient exposure and help establish biological links between diet and health outcomes. These tools work alongside self-reported food intake to give a complete picture of eating patterns.

Frequency Asked Questions

Diet plays a direct role in the development of major health conditions like heart disease and diabetes. Understanding which foods contribute to chronic illness and which dietary patterns offer protection helps people make informed choices about their health.

What are the five predominant diet-related chronic diseases?

Heart disease ranks as the leading cause of death in the United States and is heavily influenced by dietary choices. Type 2 diabetes develops when poor nutrition leads to insulin resistance and elevated blood sugar levels over time.

Stroke occurs when blood flow to the brain becomes blocked or reduced, often due to blood vessel damage from unhealthy eating patterns. Certain cancers, including colorectal and breast cancer, have been linked to dietary factors like high consumption of processed meats and low fiber intake. Chronic kidney disease can develop from conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, both of which are affected by what a person eats.

How can proper nutrition aid in the prevention of chronic illnesses?

Nutrition interventions can modify immune and inflammatory responses[18], which are key factors in chronic disease development. Eating foods rich in vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants helps the body repair cellular damage and maintain healthy organ function.

A diet focused on whole foods provides the nutrients needed to regulate blood sugar, maintain healthy cholesterol levels, and support healthy blood pressure. These factors directly reduce the risk of developing conditions like diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. Consistent healthy eating patterns also help maintain a healthy weight, which lowers stress on the heart and other organs.

What is the connection between dietary habits and the development of chronic diseases?

Poor dietary habits create inflammation in the body that damages blood vessels and organs over time. When people regularly consume excess sugar, refined carbohydrates, and unhealthy fats, their bodies struggle to process these nutrients properly.

This leads to conditions like insulin resistance, where cells stop responding effectively to insulin. High sodium intake raises blood pressure by causing the body to retain excess fluid. Ultra-processed foods have been linked to increased risk of osteoporosis[18], reduced bone mineral density, and higher incidence of gout and rheumatoid arthritis.

Which foods should be avoided to reduce the risk of diet-related chronic conditions?

Ultra-processed foods containing high amounts of added sugars, sodium, and unhealthy fats should be limited or avoided. These include packaged snacks, sugary beverages, processed meats like bacon and hot dogs, and fast food items.

Foods high in trans fats, such as commercially baked goods and some margarine products, raise bad cholesterol while lowering good cholesterol. Refined grains like white bread and white rice lack the fiber and nutrients found in whole grains. Excessive alcohol consumption damages the liver and increases inflammation throughout the body.

How has the DASH diet been shown to impact chronic disease management?

The DASH diet, which stands for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension, focuses on reducing sodium intake while increasing consumption of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. The American Heart Association recommends limiting sodium intake to 1,500-2,000 milligrams a day[19] for heart health.

This eating pattern has been shown to lower blood pressure within weeks of starting the diet. The DASH diet also improves cholesterol levels and reduces inflammation markers in the body. People following this approach typically consume more potassium, calcium, and magnesium, which support heart and bone health.

Which new demographics have been addressed in the latest dietary guidelines for disease prevention?

Recent research has focused on populations in rapidly urbanizing settings who face increased chronic disease risk. Studies in the Peruvian Amazon developed diagnostic tools for metabolic syndrome in low-resource urban populations[18], where nearly 48% of residents showed signs of the condition.

Occupational health settings have received new attention, particularly for workers with obesity who may not show obvious metabolic syndrome symptoms. Research has identified socioeconomic disparities as key factors affecting diet quality and physical activity levels among working adults. Healthcare providers now recognize the need for culturally relevant nutrition tools that account for regional food availability and traditional eating patterns.

Post Views: 3

References

  1. Optimal dietary patterns for prevention of chronic disease. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10294543/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  2. Preventing Chronic Diseases: What You Can Do Now | Chronic Disease. https://www.cdc.gov/chronic-disease/prevention/index.html Accessed April 22, 2026
  3. Healthy dietary patterns and the risk of individual chronic diseases in community-dwelling adults. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-42523-9 Accessed April 22, 2026
  4. Dietary Patterns Influence Chronic Disease Risk and Health Outcomes in Older Adults: A Narrative Review. https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/17/24/3910 Accessed April 22, 2026
  5. Nutrition and Chronic Disease: Food as Preventive Medicine. https://www.indwes.edu/articles/2025/07/nutrition-and-chronic-disease Accessed April 22, 2026
  6. Nutrition and Chronic Disease. https://nutrition.org/nutrition-and-chronic-disease/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  7. Optimal dietary patterns for prevention of chronic disease. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-023-02235-5 Accessed April 22, 2026
  8. Dietary patterns associated with lower inflammation and insulin response. https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstreams/31be8116-dc22-43c7-8d4d-e665ec972e29/download Accessed April 22, 2026
  9. Just a moment…. https://www.bmj.com/content/361/bmj.k2396 Accessed April 22, 2026
  10. Diet patterns that can boost longevity, cut chronic disease. https://www.ama-assn.org/public-health/prevention-wellness/diet-patterns-can-boost-longevity-cut-chronic-disease Accessed April 22, 2026
  11. Comprehensive Nutritional Assessments: Key to Better Primary Care. https://thekingsleyclinic.com/resources/comprehensive-nutritional-assessments-key-to-better-primary-care/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  12. When it comes to nutrition and chronic disease, focus on the basics. https://www.uclahealth.org/news/article/when-it-comes-to-nutrition-and-chronic-disease-focus-on-the-basics Accessed April 22, 2026
  13. Just a moment…. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/21501319251338566 Accessed April 22, 2026
  14. Lifestyle medicine as a modality for prevention and management of chronic diseases. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10176046/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  15. Lifestyle Risk Factors | Tracking Program. https://www.cdc.gov/environmental-health-tracking/php/data-research/lifestyle-risk-factors.html Accessed April 22, 2026
  16. Dietary Patterns to Prevent and Manage Diet-Related Disease Across the Lifespan. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK598421/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  17. Checking your browser. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8338737/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  18. Checking your browser. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12252430/ Accessed April 22, 2026
  19. How Nutrition Can Help You Better Manage a Chronic Illness – Commonwealth Care Alliance. https://www.commonwealthcarealliance.org/living-well-at-home/how-nutrition-can-help-you-better-manage-a-chronic-illness/ Accessed April 22, 2026
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