Cutting through nutrition confusion to deliver evidence-based, sustainable eating plans that improve gut, brain, and cardiometabolic health. As a clinician and columnist, she translates fast-moving science (IBS/FODMAP, anti-inflammatory diets, chrono-nutrition) into practical plans people can stick with.
In today’s conversation Leslie Beck explores how to build a realistic, sustainable way of eating—one that supports mental health, sleep, and digestion. We unpack the research linking dietary patterns to depression (including the SMILES trial), clarify what low-FODMAP really means for IBS, and separate “food first” from when supplements make sense. Leslie explains why Mediterranean and plant-forward diets remain gold-standard patterns and how planning, batch-cooking, and accountability make change stick. We also touch coconut oil myths, probiotics, microbiome testing, and the surprising nutrition–sleep connection.
You will learn how a clinician structures individualized plans at Medcan and why simple organization beats complicated rules; what “low-FODMAP” is (and isn’t) for IBS; how anti-inflammatory, Mediterranean, and plant-forward diets support brain and body; when “food first” is enough and when to consider vitamin D, B12, omega-3s; and how caffeine timing, heavy evening meals, and reflux can erode sleep quality.
You will discover that most people don’t need a perfect diet—they need a doable one: plant-forward, minimally processed, planned ahead, and repeated consistently. Small, sustainable behaviors compound into major health gains.
Endless nutrition headlines create paralysis and short-term hacks. Leslie replaces noise with evidence-based patterns (Mediterranean, plant-forward), clear IBS protocols (low-FODMAP), and practical systems (planning, accountability) so healthy eating finally sticks.