This is the same study posted somewhere else. The survey is flawed in that they asked what people ate in the last 24 hours.
That simply means that those people ate a lot in the last 24 hours. Should have been over a week or a month to get a better distribution.
“We analyzed 24-h dietary recall data from adults (n = 10,248) in the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).”
Exactly. In a world where people at a big steak dinner once a week, you’d see a similar result.
I responded to your comment before, but didn’t sufficiently think it through, so I deleted my previous response.
You raise a good point, and they do indeed acknowledge this flaw in the study:
One limitation of this work is that it was based on 1-day diet recalls, so our results do not represent usual intake. Averaging both days of data available on the NHANES would not address this problem, would reduce our sample size by 15%, and would mix recall methods between an in-person interview (day 1) and one done on the phone (day 2). Still, as a check, we examined day 2 and found the same associations with gender and MyPlate guidance.
deleted by creator
@pizzaiolo I first read this as 12 individuals. Thought that seemed excessive then remembered some eating contests I’ve seen in Texas…
Glad I’m not the only one that read it that way. Shame on me for reading the internet before the coffee kicks in.
This just sounds like another version of the 80:20 rule or the Pareto principle.
“The Pareto principle states that for many outcomes, roughly 80% of consequences come from 20% of causes”
Does guys eat beef for breakfast
This shit is so fucking stupid
Most surprising here, imo, is that only 12% of the population eats more than 4oz. of beef per day. That honestly feels low to me.
You might be one of the 12%.
Running the math on my own habits, I don’t think so, but I just figured some people are enough burgers alone to push the numbers higher than that