Build Up Dietitians Newsletter

Build Up Dietitians Newsletter

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Build Up Dietitians Newsletter
Build Up Dietitians Newsletter
8/27/24-Spotlight: Dietitian in Hungary; Save the Date: Build Up Meet Up Minneapolis; Rice-zempic; 4 Things You May Have Missed

8/27/24-Spotlight: Dietitian in Hungary; Save the Date: Build Up Meet Up Minneapolis; Rice-zempic; 4 Things You May Have Missed

"Nutrition News You Can Use"

Aug 27, 2024
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Build Up Dietitians Newsletter
Build Up Dietitians Newsletter
8/27/24-Spotlight: Dietitian in Hungary; Save the Date: Build Up Meet Up Minneapolis; Rice-zempic; 4 Things You May Have Missed
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💡Spotlight: Karolina Godáné Reisinger

Dietitian in Hungary

Social Media Manager at The Hungarian Dietetic Association

Connect with Karolina on LinkedIn HERE

Question #1: What do you like best about being a dietitian?

Answer: “I think we have to be able to handle people with a lot of empathy and I like to see when patients realize that they are actually working on a personal development, and they don’t have to face impossible self-restriction. I also enjoy being creative when it comes to patient education.”

Question #2: How do you think being a dietitian is different in your country than in the United States?

Answer: “In our country the qualifications and competencies of dietitians are developing. We hope that someday we will have more opportunities to study our fields of interests and develop our knowledge more efficiently.”

Question #3: What’s your favorite Hungarian meal?

Answer: “My favourite dish is "tökfőzelék csirkepörkölttel": that is a summer squash dish with dill and sour cream,  and the topping is chicken stew…”

📅Save the Date: Build Up Meet Up Minneapolis

Sunday, October 6th - Ticket Sales Starting SOON!

🍚On "Rice-zempic" (the latest Tik Tok trend) 🙄

❓️Does drinking the water from rice "mimic" semaglutide? No. 🚫

❓️Will it provide fluid/hydration. Yes.👍

❓️Are you likely getting arsenic? Probably

❓️Will drinking it harm you? Likely not, but in addition to the arsenic “…there is a risk of: food poisoning from the spores of a bacterium called Bacillus cereus, which can be found on as much as 50 percent of uncooked rice samples in the U.S., according to the National Institutes of Health.”

❓️Will it result in sustainable, long-term weight loss? No👎

health.com/rice-zempic-drink-8668718

newsweek.com/doctor-food-poisoning-risk…

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Don’t miss our Build Up Dietitians AMAZON store - click HERE

4️⃣Things You May Have Missed

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