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Is Dairy Healthy? A Nuanced Look at the Science and Real-World Outcomes

 Recently, Mark Sisson posted on X declaring: “Time to stop the “research.” Dairy is good for you.” Citing recent research, he concluded that dairy is universally beneficial. You can read Mark’s post here.

But after working with hundreds of clients and staying updated on the science, I see the dairy debate as still very much alive—and that’s a good thing. Here’s a look at what the latest, highest-quality research actually shows, and why the best approach is a personalized, context-driven one.

What Does the Science Say?

The most comprehensive reviews and meta-analyses tell a nuanced story:

Cardiometabolic Health

Obesity, Body Composition & Metabolic Syndrome

Bone Health

Cancer & Other Outcomes

Fat Content: Full-Fat vs Low-Fat

What About Real-World Clients?

Scientific findings are based on averages and trends, but real life is about individuals. As a health coach, I’ve seen:

Putting the Evidence into Practice

Instead of blanket rules—personalize and experiment:

Takeaway

No single food is universally healthy—or unhealthy—for everyone. Dairy can be beneficial (or at least harmless) for many, particularly in fermented forms, but individual differences, dietary context, and health goals matter. Stay curious, listen to your body, and let personal experience + robust evidence guide your nutrition choices.

The Science

Interested in the research on dairy and health outcomes. Many of the studies I reference plus a whole bunch more can be found here in this PDF, enjoy!

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