Why nutritional RDA, DRI, and EAR values may not be optimum for long-term health | Bruce Ames

Posted on April 3rd 2022 (almost 3 years)

The Omega-3 Supplementation Guide

A blueprint for choosing the right fish oil supplement — filled with specific recommendations, guidelines for interpreting testing data, and dosage protocols.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Please check your email to confirm your subscription and get The Omega-3 Supplementation Guide!

You'll also receive updates from Rhonda & FoundMyFitness

Love our episodes? Subscribe to our channels

In this clip, Bruce Ames explains that recommended daily allowance (RDA) is set at two standard deviations above the estimated average requirement (EAR). The estimated average requirement for a specific nutrient is established at levels to prevent short term diseases such as rickets and scurvy. Bruce explains that this may still leave people insufficient for long-term diseases. In light of his triage theory, this means a poor diet may have enough nutrition to prevent serious acute diseases but still lead to accelerated aging and long-term diseases.

Supporting our work

If you enjoy the fruits of foundmyfitness , you can participate in helping us to keep improving it. Creating a premium subscription does just that! Plus, we throw in occasional member perks and, more importantly, churn out the best possible content without concerning ourselves with the wishes of any dark overlords.

Monthly Support

  • Fundamentals
    $15 / month
  • Loyal Fan
    $25 / month
  • Super Fan
    $50 / month
  • Power Supporter
    $125 / month
  • Heroic Supporter
    $250 / month