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A gut health and cancer researcher shared the foods she eats to lower her disease risk

Dr. Susan Bullman
Dr. Susan Bullman, who studies the connection between gut health and cancer, follows a fiber-rich diet.

  • Dr. Susan Bullman researches the relationship between gut health and cancer.
  • She said eating too many ultra-processed foods can promote tumor growth.
  • She shared the fiber-rich, high-protein whole foods she eats to reduce her cancer risk.

As colon cancer rates continue to rise in people under 45, researchers like Dr. Susan Bullman are studying the role gut health may play in the uptick.

“These individuals are often very healthy — they’re exercising, they’re physically fit,” Bullman, a researcher and associate professor at MD Anderson Cancer Center, told Business Insider.

In many cases, these patients also follow nutrient-rich diets, as Business Insider previously reported.

Still, these days it can be tough to hit your daily recommended amount of fiber and vitamins, given the oversaturation of low-nutrient, ultra-processed foods in our supermarkets.

Packaged snacks, which tend to lack essential nutrients, can disrupt the production of protective mucus in the gut, allowing harmful microbes to enter the bloodstream. Over time, this can lead to inflammation and the growth of cancerous tumors.

A man holding a protein bar
Bullman said protein bars and other products marketed as “high-protein” are often ultra-processed and bad for gut health.

Through her research, Bullman has found that eating fiber-rich foods like lentils and beans not only feeds beneficial gut microbes. It may also reduce the risk of developing colon cancer and oral cancer, because dangerous gut bacteria can travel to the mouth (and vice versa). Plus, there is some evidence that high-fiber diets can improve responses to treatments for skin cancer.

“If you think about your gut as a housing estate, you want the real estate to be occupied by these beneficial microbes,” she said.

Influenced by her own research, Bullman shared a few of the foods she eats to reduce her cancer risk.

Oatmeal with fruit is a filling, high-fiber breakfast

Oatmeal with fruit
Oatmeal with fruit, nuts, and seeds is a great source of natural fiber and protein.

The recommended daily fiber intake is 25 grams for women and 38 for men — but most Americans eat less than 10 grams a day, according to the USDA’s Economic Research Service.

Bullman likes to start her morning with oatmeal and fruit. A cup of oatmeal with a cup of raspberries has about 12 grams of fiber.

“I often have grapes and bananas to try and get some extra fiber in there,” Bullman said. She also snacks on pears, which are one of the highest-fiber fruits.

She focuses on whole protein sources

Grilled chicken salad
Bullman eats protein like grilled chicken with plenty of vegetables.

“High-protein” products have become trendy over the last few years, as protein intake is linked to muscle growth and overall health.

Bullman, who strength trains with free weights and also tries to eat enough protein to see results, said she’s wary of some of the new items on offer in grocery stores.

“You’ll see things like high-protein cereals, high-protein pasta, and you think, ‘It’s full of protein, so it’s good for me,'” Bullman said. But she said items like protein bars are often ultra-processed, containing ingredients like emulsifiers and stabilizers to make them tastier and give them a long shelf life.

Instead, Bullman focuses on whole protein sources, such as chicken. For lunch, she sometimes has chicken salad with chia or pumpkin seeds for more fiber and protein.

Dinner is typically a fist-sized portion of protein, such as grilled chicken or beef, accompanied by some fiber-rich vegetables and whole grains, she said, more or less following the Mediterranean diet.

Adding kefir to smoothies

Smoothie
Bullman swaps milk for kefir in her smoothies to add more probiotics.

Bullman also tries to eat fermented foods, which are rich in probiotics and great for the gut microbiome. She swaps dairy milk with kefir, a fermented milk drink, in her smoothies.

When buying kefir, she recommended looking at the list of microbes on the label — the more variety, the better. “You don’t want to just take one microbe,” she said. “You want to make sure that it’s a community.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
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There’s one thing about tariffs that might seriously affect consumers, a chief investment officer at BNY warns

A woman walking in front of the BNY logo.
Sinead Colton Grant, chief investment officer at BNY Wealth, said closing the de minimis loophole could impact e-commerce.

  • BNY Wealth’s CIO said it’s “really closely” watching the closing of the de minimis loophole.
  • Sinead Colton Grant said online shoppers are more likely to notice price differences than in-store shoppers.
  • This could particularly hurt small businesses outside the US, she said.

A chief investment officer told Business Insider there’s one thing about tariffs she’s watching really closely because of its potential impact on consumers: the closure of the so-called de minimis loophole.

The de minimis exemption, which allowed packages worth under $800 to enter the country duty-free and without undergoing the formal customs process, ended in August.

This closure could have major impacts for US consumers, Sinead Colton Grant, chief investment officer at BNY Wealth, told Business Insider in an interview.

“The thing that we are watching really closely … is the elimination of the $800 exemption for imports because that hits a lot of consumers more directly,” Colton Grant said.

“That could and in many cases will lead to a consumer actually seeing exactly what the tariffs will do,” she added.

When you go into a store, there’s a single headline price, and you’re not aware of what’s driving it, she explained. Whereas with online shopping, you’ll notice when the de minimis exemption is not there, Colton Grant said.

This could have a “broader ripple effect,” she said, especially on smaller businesses that are less likely to have operations in the US.

When President Donald Trump unveiled his “Liberation Day” levies at the beginning of April, much of the focus was on larger-scale imports and exports, rather than consumer spending.

However, the Trump administration issued an executive order to close the de minimis loophole in July.

For BNY Wealth, the inflationary impact of tariffs in the US was only expected to be a “one-off,” and then prices would return to an equilibrium-like level, Colton Grant said.

“Our view, even when everything was unveiled on April 2nd, was that this is a negotiating stand,” she said, adding that many of the tariffs are now much lower than when they were first announced. “We were saying that from the start of the year.”

Consumer spending was up 0.6% in August after rising 0.5% in July and previously 0.4% in June, according to the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Read the original article on Business Insider