Water 101- Part 4 - Science, Marketing, and Evaluating Health Claims
Over the last few posts we've discussed:
๐Ÿ’ง Clean Water
๐Ÿ’ง Water Filtration
๐Ÿ’ง Hydration
๐Ÿ’ง Electrolytes
Now let's talk about something equally important:
How do you know whether a health claim is supported by scienceโ€”or just good marketing?
In today's wellness industry, we're constantly being bombarded with promises.
"This changes your cells."
"This detoxes your body."
"This boosts energy."
"This reverses aging."
"This is the missing piece."
Some products may have merit.
Some are oversold.
Some are little more than expensive marketing.
The challenge is learning how to tell the difference.
When I evaluate a health product, supplement, device, or protocol, I start with five simple questions.
1๏ธโƒฃ Is There a Plausible Biological Mechanism?
In other words:
Can we explain HOW it works?
Not with buzzwords.
Not with testimonials.
Not with marketing language.
Can we explain what is happening physiologically?
The body is incredibly complex, but biology still follows rules.
The more extraordinary the claim, the stronger the evidence should be.
2๏ธโƒฃ Is There Human Research?
Animal studies can be useful.
Laboratory studies can be interesting.
But ultimately, we want to know:
Has this been studied in actual humans?
And if so:
โ€ข How many people?
โ€ข For how long?
โ€ข What outcomes were measured?
One small study doesn't prove something works.
But multiple studies showing similar findings begin to build a case.
3๏ธโƒฃ Can the Claimed Benefit Be Measured?
Some things are objective.
Examples include:
โœ” Blood sugar
โœ” Cholesterol
โœ” Blood pressure
โœ” Recovery markers
โœ” Exercise performance
โœ” Inflammatory markers
โœ” Contaminant reduction
These can be measured.
When claims become vague or impossible to quantify, skepticism becomes appropriate.
4๏ธโƒฃ How Much of the Benefit Comes From the Product vs. The Marketing?
This is one of the most overlooked questions in health.
Sometimes a product isn't necessarily bad.
It's simply being marketed as far more important than it actually is.
Many tools may provide a small benefit.
Very few are life-changing.
And almost none replace the foundations of health.
5๏ธโƒฃ Would I Get a Bigger Return By Improving The Basics?
Before spending thousands of dollars on a device, ask yourself:
Am I sleeping well?
Am I eating enough protein?
Am I drinking clean water?
Am I getting sunlight?
Am I moving my body?
Am I managing stress?
Am I supporting my body's nutritional needs?
Because most people don't have an optimization problem.
They have a foundation problem.
And foundations will outperform gadgets almost every time.
The Bedrock Approach
At Bedrock Nutrition, we believe in:
๐Ÿฅ‡ Foundation First
๐Ÿฅˆ Function Second
๐Ÿฅ‰ Optimization Third
That's why we spend so much time talking about:
โœ” Food
โœ” Sleep
โœ” Hydration
โœ” Sunlight
โœ” Movement
โœ” Stress
โœ” Supplements when appropriate
Those are the big rocks.
Those are the things that move the needle.
Optimization tools can absolutely have valueโ€”but they should sit on top of a strong foundation, not replace it.
The goal isn't to chase every new trend.
The goal is to become an educated consumer who can separate evidence from marketing and make decisions that align with your health goals, budget, and priorities.
Because real health isn't built on hype.
It's built on consistent daily choices.
Fuel.
Repair.
Restore.
The body does the rest.
Interested in one example of an emerging optimization tool?
I've written a separate article that takes a deeper dive into the science, benefits, limitations, and hype surrounding Molecular Hydrogen and hydrogen tablets.
#Water101 #BedrockNutrition #RootedFaithWellness #FunctionalNutrition #TerrainHealth #Hydration #BecomeYourOwnPhysician #EvidenceBasedWellness
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Leanna Cappucci
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Water 101- Part 4 - Science, Marketing, and Evaluating Health Claims
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