Learn entry

Food as Medicine: What the Evidence Actually Shows

Separating evidence-based dietary interventions from wellness culture claims — what works, what doesn't, and what we don't know yet.

Evaluate8 min read Editor's pick
How this entry is structured
Definitions first, then mechanisms, then “so what?”. If you are in a hurry, skim the headings and callouts.
Not medical advice
Educational content only. If symptoms are severe, persistent, or worrying, see a clinician.

A Crowded Claims Market

The notion that food can prevent, treat, or cure disease is powerful and ancient. Modern wellness culture has amplified this idea to the point where dietary claims often outstrip evidence — "anti-inflammatory" diets, "gut-healing" protocols, and "immune-boosting" foods are marketed with a confidence that peer-reviewed science does not support. The truth lies between nihilism and hype: specific dietary interventions have strong evidence for specific conditions, while broad claims require scepticism.

What Has Strong Evidence

The low-FODMAP diet is the most rigorously tested dietary intervention in gastroenterology. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses confirm that the low-FODMAP diet reduces global IBS symptoms in 50 to 80 percent of patients, with improvements in bloating, abdominal pain, and stool consistency. It works as a structured elimination-and-reintroduction protocol — not a permanent restriction.

Exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) — a formula-based liquid diet replacing all food intake for 6 to 8 weeks — is first-line therapy for inducing remission in paediatric Crohn's disease, with efficacy comparable to corticosteroids and superior mucosal healing. This is one of the most dramatic examples of food as medicine in gastroenterology.

The Mediterranean dietary pattern — characterised by high intake of fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, olive oil, fish, and moderate wine — is associated with reduced cardiovascular risk, lower cancer incidence, reduced all-cause mortality, and improved microbial diversity in large epidemiological studies and interventional trials.

The gluten-free diet is essential and effective for coeliac disease — a strict, lifelong therapeutic intervention.

What Has Emerging Evidence

The Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED), combining partial enteral nutrition with a whole-food diet excluding specific processed foods, has shown efficacy in paediatric and adult Crohn's disease in recent RCTs. Anti-inflammatory diet patterns (increased omega-3 fatty acids, polyphenol-rich foods, fibre diversity) show metabolic and microbiome benefits in observational and small interventional studies, but lack the large-scale RCT evidence of pharmaceutical interventions.

What Lacks Evidence

Detox diets, juice cleanses, alkaline diets, and most "gut-healing" supplement protocols lack clinical trial evidence. Claims that specific foods "boost immunity" misrepresent how the immune system works — you want a well-regulated immune system, not a boosted one. Collagen supplements for "gut lining repair" have no RCT evidence demonstrating mucosal healing.

The Balanced View

Diet is a powerful modulator of health — through microbiome effects, metabolic signalling, and inflammatory pathways. But "food as medicine" works best as a complement to, not a replacement for, evidence-based medical care. The most evidence-supported approach is a diverse, minimally processed, plant-rich dietary pattern — not a collection of individual superfoods or a rigid elimination protocol.

Was this entry helpful?

Sources & references

  1. Khalili H et al. (2024) Food as Medicine: Evidence-Based Dietary Interventions for GI Conditions Gastroenterology PMID: 38013567
  2. De Filippis F et al. (2023) Mediterranean Diet and Gut Microbiome Diversity Gut PMID: 37679123
  3. Fairbrass KM et al. (2016) IBS and IBD overlap syndrome Frontline Gastroenterol PMID: 27799880
  4. Linedale EC et al. (2016) Uncertain diagnostic language in functional GI disorders Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol PMID: 27404968
  5. Bhise V et al. (2018) Managing uncertainty in diagnostic practice BMJ Qual Saf PMID: 25881017
Editorial standards
Every entry is grounded in peer-reviewed research and reviewed for accuracy. How we write →