Red meat consumption within high-quality diets may support mental health

14 PaulHoule 16 8/26/2025, 11:54:59 AM medicalxpress.com ↗

Comments (16)

flr03 · 4h ago
Extra context: - Still under review (unpublished) - Funding Sources: National Cattlemen's Beef Association.
iammjm · 3h ago
or_am_i · 4h ago
Yes, and the press release makes no mention of this extra context -- hardly good journalism.
virgildotcodes · 4h ago
Lmao, literally - https://cdn.nutrition.org/article/S2475-2991(25)01500-8/full...

"Smoking correlated with high rates of permanent and total relief of lung and various other cancers and maladies"

This scientific finding brought to you by Phillip Morris.

anotheryou · 1h ago
how bad must it be if all they came up with is still just "might be positive, at least nothing bad happens"
jmclnx · 3h ago
I figured that it was supported by the cattle people.

Maybe true, but my instinct says probably not true. "High Quality Diet" is the reason. Maybe the "High Quality" by itself is enough :)

Plus they do not say how much meat, in very small quantities I could believe this, but eating pounds of beef a month, I really doubt it.

bschwarz · 4h ago
Best taken with a grain of salt as this study was funded by the National Cattlemen's Beef Association.
tjr · 3h ago
That certainly raises questions.

I am bemused / irked / saddened by the state of nutritional science research. I am convinced that the classic "food pyramid" that was pushed for years was a bad idea, but now guidance on what to eat seems to have split into various warring factions.

Some say that we should severely limit or even avoid meat. Their words look correct on the surface, but I notice their science seems based on "meat" pretty generically. There doesn't seem to be any accounting for eating high end grass fed beef from an organic market vs. low-end beef from a gas station. Does it really make no difference?

Another faction recommends eating meat freely, with no distinction as to type or quality. Another insists on the highest grade meat but then also discourages dairy. Another recommends high quality meat and no vegetables.

I would think that it would be, by now, more straightforward to determine what really makes most sense to eat. I guess (nearly?) everyone seems to agree that adequate water is good and too much sugar isn't.

generalzod · 3h ago
> Best taken with a grain of salt

Red meat or the study ?

juancn · 2h ago
There are no unhealthy foods, just unhealthy diets.

As Paracelsus said about 500 years ago:

    All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison
yabones · 3h ago
Surely this is just the link between financial well being (having enough money to spend on high quality food) and mental health? I guess "people with enough money to afford the food they want" isn't as catchy of a headline...
weberer · 3h ago
>Protein intake was significantly higher among individuals consuming red meat (77.58±26.84g in HH-R and 80.74±35.8g in LH-R) compared to individuals not consuming red meat (67.35±26.85g in HH-NR and 62.99±29.56g in LH-NR, p< 0.001), while carbohydrate intake was lower in red meat groups. Total fat and saturated fat intake in the HH-R was within recommended limits. The inclusion of red meat also improved micronutrient adequacy, with the red meat group showing higher selenium, vit-B12, zinc, calcium, vit-D3, and choline.
ddorian43 · 3h ago
Best diet for mental health is keto diet, or better carnivore, but needs to be very-high fat, and best is non-dairy fat (example beef fat trimmings).

Source: See metabolicmind.org

snozolli · 3h ago
That's a bold claim with weak evidence.
ddorian43 · 3h ago
It's very hard to do, epilepsy keto. And it doesn't work on all cases. But it does work in many cases. For 100+ years now.
baseballdork · 2h ago
Helping some small portion of the people who suffer from epilepsy is a far cry from "Best diet for mental health is keto diet".