• @yamanii
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    1911 months ago

    I don’t know how common it is but my grandmas always said that you shouldn’t eat pork after being released from the hospital or while sick. Then I finally remembered to ask a doctor about it and he said there’s no such thing.

    • @Trail
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      1411 months ago

      I understand that the notion behind it is to eat easy to digest foods, instead of red meat, in order not to burden your body trying to metabolise them while it is also fighting a disease.

      I can sort of get behind this, but I also say you still need your protein. Over here a chicken stew is quite commonly given to sick people, maybe for this reasoning.

      • Anti-Face Weapon
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        411 months ago

        Vegetables are harder to digest because of the cellulose or something. That’s why our intestines are so long.

        • Throw a Foxtrot
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          fedilink
          1311 months ago

          We don’t digest cellulose, our intestines and appendix are not long enough. Compare our body plan to a horse or rat (giant appendix) or cow or sheep (multiple stomachs, filled with bacteria that break down cellulose). Cellulose goes right through. But that’s the fiber that is always so highly praised and not actually a bad thing.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          111 months ago

          Cows have four stomachs and rechew their half digested food for hours for a reason!

          Plants are not proper food for animals and people with sensible digestive systems!

      • @yamanii
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        311 months ago

        That’s the thing, you can still eat beef and everything from bovines, fish, chicken, my grandmas only said this about pork!

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          711 months ago

          Could have been because of the prevalence of trichinosis in pork until relatively recently (i.e. in your grandmother’s lifetime). If your immune system is in good shape, it’s not terribly risky, but if you just came out of the hospital you probably aren’t in peak form. So avoid pork for a while until your body can properly fight off parasites again.

          Proper food safety and livestock handling has dramatically reduced the risk of parasite infections from pork in most of the developed world.