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Prime Hydration Drink — Sports Beverage by Logan Paul & KSI

Prime Hydration Drink

 Honestly? I don’t trust hype. I trust ingredients.

And I’ve been in pharma long enough to know most sports drinks are just sugar water with fancy labels.

Prime Hydration is different. Not because it’s magic — but because the formula actually makes sense.

I don’t care about Logan Paul or KSI. Their names don’t mean anything to me. But the bottle? That I can read.


What’s in the Bottle?

Prime Hydration launched in 2022. Two YouTubers behind it. Big hype. But look past the marketing and you’ll find:

  • Zero sugar

  • Electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium)

  • BCAAs (leucine, isoleucine, valine)

  • B vitamins

  • Vitamin C

  • Zinc

That’s not a bad line-up.

But here’s the thing — a good ingredient list doesn’t always mean a good product. You have to look at the quantities. And that’s where Prime gets tricky.


How Does It Compare to Gatorade?

Drink Sugar Electrolytes BCAAs Calories
Prime 0g ✅ Yes ✅ Yes 20-25
Gatorade 21g ✅ Yes ❌ No 140
Powerade 21g ✅ Yes ❌ No 130

Prime wins on sugar. No question. But if you’re doing intense exercise, you actually need some carbs. Gatorade has them. Prime doesn’t.

So it depends on what you’re doing. Light workout? Prime is fine. Running a marathon? Get something with carbs.


The Sucralose Thing

Prime uses sucralose. Artificial sweetener. Safe in small amounts.

But some people get bloating from it. Some get digestive issues. Not everyone — but some. If you’re drinking Prime every day, you’re consuming a lot of it.

There’s research on sucralose and gut health. Some studies say it’s fine. Others say it changes your microbiome. I’m not taking sides — just pointing out that it’s not completely neutral.


Who Should Drink Prime?

Who Should They Drink It?
Casual gym-goer ✅ Yes — low sugar, good hydration
Athlete in training 🟡 Maybe — but you need carbs too
Someone trying to cut sugar ✅ Yes — much better than sugary drinks
Kid who wants the hype ✅ Fine — but don’t expect health miracles
Someone with digestive issues ⚠️ Check — sucralose can be a trigger

My Honest Take

I’m not a nutritionist. I’m a chemist.

Prime is decent. It’s low sugar, has electrolytes, and doesn’t taste bad. It’s better than Gatorade if you’re trying to cut sugar. But it’s not better than water. Water is still the best drink on the planet.

If you want to try it — go ahead. It’s not harmful. But don’t think to going to transform your health. It’s a sports drink. Nothing more.


What I Tell People

If you like Prime and it fits your budget — drink it. It’s not going to hurt you.

But if you’re expecting some kind of performance boost — you’ll be disappointed. The BCAAs are there, but in small amounts. The electrolytes are there, but you could get them from food.

Prime is a hydration drink. That’s it. It’s not a performance enhancerIt’s not a health supplement. It’s just a drink.


Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff

Reviewed by: Dr. Ayesha, Medical Reviewer


References

  1. Sports drinks and hydration: a review. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition. 2025.

  2. Sucralose and gut health. Nutrients. 2024.

  3. Hydration for athletes — guidelines. American College of Sports Medicine. 2025.


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GLP-1 diet

GLP-1 Diet — What to Eat

Look, I’ve seen a lot of people start GLP-1 meds. They lose weight. Feel great. Then they hit a wall. They’re eating too little. Or they’re eating the wrong stuff. Or they’re just not eating at all. And they don’t even realise it. So here’s the deal — let’s actually talk about what you should be eating when you’re on GLP-1. First — What Happens to Your Diet on GLP-1? These drugs slow down your digestion. They reduce appetite. You feel full faster and stay full longer. Sounds good, right? But here’s the problem. A 2026 study found that people on GLP-1s were eating barely 800-1,200 calories a day. That’s not enough. Not even close. And less than 10% were getting enough protein. So you’re losing weight — but you’re also losing muscle. And that’s not what you want. The GLP-1 Diet Problem Nobody Talks About Problem What Happens Low calorie intake 800-1,200 calories/day — too low Low protein Less than 10% meet protein needs Muscle loss 25-40% of weight lost comes from muscle Slow metabolism Muscle loss = slower metabolism Weight regain When you stop, weight comes back faster That’s the cycle. And it’s avoidable. What Should You Eat on GLP-1? Here’s what I tell people. Simple stuff. Nothing fancy. 1. Protein — Non-Negotiable Aim for at least 100g of protein a day. If you don’t, you’ll lose muscle instead of fat. Your metabolism will slow down. And when you stop the medication, the weight will come back — faster than before. What to eat: Eggs Chicken breast Fish Greek yoghurt Protein shakes (if you can’t eat enough) 2. Fiber — For Digestion GLP-1s slow down digestion. Constipation is common. Fiber helps keep things moving. It also fills you up without adding many calories. What to eat: Oats Beans Broccoli Berries Flaxseeds 3. Hydration — Don’t Forget You’re eating less, so you’re also getting less water from food. Dehydration can make nausea worse. What to do: Drink 8-10 glasses of water a day Start your day with a glass of water Add electrolytes if you feel weak 4. Small, Frequent Meals Large meals can trigger nausea — especially in the early weeks. What to do: Eat 4-5 small meals a day Don’t skip meals — that makes nausea worse Eat slowly — it takes time for the fullness signal to reach your brain What to Avoid Food Why Avoid It Greasy, fried foods Slow digestion = more nausea Spicy foods Can irritate your stomach Sugar-sweetened drinks Empty calories Alcohol Dehydrates you, adds empty calories My Take I’m not a nutritionist. I’m a chemist who’s seen enough to know that GLP-1s work — but they work better when you eat properly. Most people focus on the medication and forget about the food. That’s a mistake. The drug helps you lose weight. But if you eat badly while you’re on it, you’ll just regain it when you stop. So eat protein, eat fibre, drink water, eat small meals. Simple. If you’re on a GLP-1 and you’re not thinking about your diet — you’re doing it wrong. Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff Reviewed by: Dr. Ayesha, Medical Reviewer References Dietary intake patterns and nutritional adequacy among adults with overweight or obesity treated with GLP-1. Journal of Translational Medicine. 2026. Nutrition-First Support for GLP-1 and Dual Incretin Therapy in Obesity. Nutrients. 2026. Keep Reading — More from Medical Bluff 📌 Pillar Posts: Food as Medicine: Why Your Diet Matters More Than Ever Obesity and Diabetes in US — What 2026 Data Reveals GLP-1 Medications: Beyond Weight Loss — 2026’s Top Health Trend 📌 Cluster Posts (Deep Dives): Medically Tailored Meals — What They Are and Who Needs Them Hypertension Crisis: 1 in 2 Adults Affected Produce Prescriptions — Can Doctors Really Prescribe Vegetables? Food Insecurity Rising: 7.4M Older Adults Affected Mediterranean Diet — Still the Best Overall Diet for 2026 — Coming Soon

food insecurity

Food Insecurity Rising — 7.4 Million Older Adults Affected

Let me be real with you. I’ve been in pharma for over 13 years. Seen a lot of patients. But there’s one thing that keeps coming up — people who can’t afford to eat well. And it’s getting worse. You’d think in a country like the US, older people would have enough to eat. But they don’t. 7.4 million older adults are food insecure right now. That’s not a small number. That’s people skipping meals, going hungry, or eating cheap processed food because they can’t afford better. What Does Food Insecurity Actually Mean? It means not having reliable access to enough affordable, nutritious food. For older adults, it means: Skipping meals because you can’t afford groceries Buying cheap, processed food instead of fresh fruits and vegetables Choosing between food and medication Relying on food banks or charitable programs to get by A recent report found that 83% of food-insecure seniors are using their savings just to cover basic needs like housing and utilities. And nearly two-thirds rely on charitable food assistance every month. The Numbers — A Snapshot Statistic Detail 7.4 million Older adults facing food insecurity 28% Americans 50+ can’t cover a $100 emergency expense 33% Ran out of food before they had money to buy more 19.1% Older adults in NYC are food insecure 13.7% US households overall are food insecure 5% Increase in food insecurity among older Americans from 2011-2023 How Food Insecurity Affects Health When you can’t afford nutritious food, you eat what you can get. Usually that means cheap, processed, high-sodium, high-sugar food. That leads to: Health Issue How Food Insecurity Makes It Worse Diabetes Hard to manage blood sugar without access to healthy food High blood pressure Processed food is loaded with sodium Heart disease Poor diet increases risk Obesity Cheap food is often calorie-dense but nutrient-poor Malnutrition Older adults need protein and vitamins — but can’t afford them A recent report from the National Council on Aging shows that food insecurity among older adults is linked to higher rates of chronic disease and increased healthcare costs. Limited access to nutritious food can worsen chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension. And when you’re already dealing with a chronic illness, not eating well makes everything harder. Why Is This Happening? Several things are coming together. Rising food prices — groceries are more expensive than they were a few years ago. A survey found that in early 2026, nearly 20% of households earning under $50,000 reported skipping meals or going hungry. Fixed incomes — many older adults are on fixed incomes. When prices go up, they can’t keep up. Inadequate SNAP enrollment — less than one-third of eligible older adults are enrolled in SNAP. That means millions of people who qualify for food assistance aren’t getting it. The Senior Hunger Prevention Act was introduced to address this. But it hasn’t passed yet. What Can You Do? Action Why It Helps Check if you qualify for SNAP Millions of older adults are eligible but not enrolled Use food banks and pantries They exist to help — use them Talk to your doctor If you’re struggling to afford food, they may know local resources Meal delivery programs Some programs deliver nutritious meals to older adults at low cost Community programs Local churches and community centers often have food programs Data from the Feeding America network shows that food banks are seeing increased demand from older adults. Many of these programs also offer nutrition education and cooking classes to help people make the most of their food budgets. What I Tell People I’m not a social worker. I’m a chemist who’s been in pharma long enough to know that food is medicine. If you can’t afford good food, you can’t stay healthy. If you’re an older adult struggling to afford food — there’s no shame in asking for help. SNAP exists for a reason. Food banks exist for a reason. Use them. And if you know someone who might be struggling — check on them. Ask them if they have enough to eat. Sometimes people won’t ask for help, but they’ll accept it if you offer. Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff Reviewed by: Dr. Ayesha, Medical Reviewer References National Council on Aging. (2026). Food Insecurity Among Older Adults Report. Feeding America. (2026). Senior Food Insecurity Data. USDA Economic Research Service. (2026). Household Food Security in the United States. Senior Hunger Prevention Act. (2026). Congressional Report. Keep Reading — More from Medical Bluff 📌 Pillar Posts: Obesity and Diabetes in US — What 2026 Data Reveals Food as Medicine: Why Your Diet Matters More Than Ever 📌 Cluster Posts (Deep Dives): Medically Tailored Meals — What They Are and Who Needs Them Hypertension Crisis: 1 in 2 Adults Affected Produce Prescriptions — Can Doctors Really Prescribe Vegetables? Why Younger Adults Are Getting Diabetes Faster — Coming Soon

produce prescriptions

Produce Prescriptions : Can Doctors Really Prescribe Vegetables?

Let me be real with you. I’ve been in pharma for over 13 years. I’ve seen doctors write prescriptions for all kinds of drugs. Blood pressure meds. Diabetes meds. Cholesterol meds. But vegetables? That sounded strange to me too. But it’s actually happening — doctors are writing produce prescriptions to help patients manage chronic disease. And it’s working. What Is a Produce Prescription? A produce prescription is exactly what it sounds like — a doctor tells a patient to eat more fruits and vegetables. But here’s the difference: it comes with money to buy them. The patient gets a voucher or a debit card — usually $15 to $40 per month — that they can use at grocery stores or farmers’ markets. They can only buy fruits and vegetables with it. No junk food. No processed stuff. Just produce. In North Carolina, one program gives patients $40 a month loaded onto a grocery loyalty card, and it’s been backed by **[research from the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy](** on the impact of produce prescriptions on chronic disease management. Since 2019, patients have redeemed over $7 million in produce. And they’re actually spending twice that amount from their own money too. Do Produce Prescriptions Actually Work? The short answer is yes. A review of 11 studies found significant improvements in: Health Marker What Improved Weight/BMI Went down Blood pressure Went down HbA1c Went down Blood glucose Went down Blood lipids Went down Another study found that a produce prescription program in North Carolina improved glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes. The evidence is piling up. And it’s not just about weight — it’s about managing real diseases with real food. How Widespread Is This? Right now, there are over 100 produce prescription programs across the US. States like North Carolina, California, and Massachusetts already have Medicaid-sponsored programs in place. The VA and Indian Health Services have also committed to launching produce prescription pilots. In January 2026, the Produce Prescriptions for Veterans Act was introduced in Congress. If passed, it would allow the VA to provide produce prescriptions to veterans with diet-related chronic conditions who are food-insecure. The federal government is also pushing this forward. The White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health included produce prescriptions as part of its strategy to reduce diet-related disease by 2030. Why Do Produce Prescriptions Matter? Because the numbers are ugly. Only 1 in 10 Americans eat the recommended amount of fruits and vegetables. 1 in 2 Americans are diabetic or prediabetic. 75% of Americans are overweight or obese. 80% of healthcare spending goes to preventable chronic diseases. And poor diet is the number one risk factor for death globally. Something has to change. Produce prescriptions aren’t the only solution — but they’re part of it. What Are the Challenges? It’s not all smooth sailing. Challenge Detail Cost Even with a $40/month benefit, that adds up quickly. If 30 million Medicare beneficiaries qualified, it would cost over $14 billion annually Access Some patients don’t have a grocery store nearby. Or they don’t have transportation to get there Adherence Some patients just don’t use the vouchers. They might not know how to cook the food, or they might not like it Knowledge gap Many patients don’t know what to do with the vegetables once they buy them That’s why some programs also include cooking classes or nutrition education. The YMCA’s produce prescription program combines weekly produce deliveries with the Diabetes Prevention Program — so patients learn how to eat healthy while they’re getting the food. What I Tell People I’m not a nutritionist. I’m a chemist who’s been in pharma long enough to know that food matters more than most people think. Produce prescriptions are a good idea. They’re evidence-based, they’re growing, and they’re helping people manage chronic disease. But they’re not magic. They work best when combined with education, support, and access. If you’re a patient with diabetes or high blood pressure — ask your doctor about produce prescription programs in your area. If they don’t know about them, tell them to look into it. And if you’re a policymaker — this is something worth paying attention to. Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff Reviewed by: Dr. Ayesha, Medical Reviewer   References Food Security Outcomes and Postintervention Experiences in a Produce Prescription Pilot: A Mixed-Methods Study. ScienceDirect. 2026.  Integrating Produce Prescriptions into the Healthcare System: Perspectives from Key Stakeholders. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022.  Thompson-Lastad A, et al. Implementing food as medicine during COVID-19: produce prescriptions and integrative group medical visits in federally qualified health centers. Glob Adv Integr Med Health. 2025.  Drake C, et al. Produce Prescription Subsidy for Patients With Diabetes: A Pragmatic Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Internal Medicine. 2026;186(4):416-424.  Glover K, et al. Produce prescription to improve health among adults with type 2 diabetes in Australia: protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Contemporary Clinical Trials. 2025;153:107915.  Dev Das and Ahmed, A. Produce prescription: a novel strategy for NCDs in Pakistan. Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association. 2026;76(06):1000.    Keep Reading — More from Medical Bluff 📌 Pillar Posts: Food as Medicine: Why Your Diet Matters More Than Ever Obesity and Diabetes in US — What 2026 Data Reveals 📌 Cluster Posts (Deep Dives): Medically Tailored Meals — What They Are and Who Needs Them Hypertension Crisis: 1 in 2 Adults Affected Food Insecurity Rising: 7.4M Older Adults Affected  Why Younger Adults Are Getting Diabetes Faster — Coming Soon

hypertension

Hypertension Crisis: 1 in 2 Adults Affected

Let me be real with you. I’ve been in pharma for over 13 years. I’ve seen patients with high blood pressure ignore it for years. They feel fine. No symptoms. So they think it’s not a big deal. Then one day — heart attack. Stroke. Kidney failure. Hypertension doesn’t give you warnings. It just quietly damages your body until something breaks. And here’s the scary part — nearly half of US adults have it. The Numbers — Hypertension in 2026 The latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that nearly half of US adults have hypertension. Statistic Detail 50% of US adults have hypertension Only 1 in 4 have it under control 45% of adults are now affected by cardiovascular disease — driven largely by high blood pressure, obesity, and diabetes By 2050, projections show 61% of adults will have hypertension What Is Hypertension? Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against your artery walls. When it stays high for too long, it damages your blood vessels. Two numbers: Systolic (top) — pressure when your heart beats Diastolic (bottom) — pressure when your heart rests Normal: Below 120/80 Elevated: 120-129 / below 80 Stage 1: 130-139 / 80-89 Stage 2: 140 or higher / 90 or higher Why Is Hypertension So Dangerous? Organ What Happens Heart Works harder → becomes enlarged → heart failure Brain Blood vessels weaken → stroke risk Kidneys Damaged blood vessels → kidney failure Eyes Damaged blood vessels → vision loss Arteries Hardening → plaque buildup → heart attack Who Is at Risk for Hypertension? Risk Factor Detail Age Risk increases with age Family history Genetics play a role Obesity Extra weight strains the heart Lack of exercise Sedentary lifestyle High sodium diet Salt raises blood pressure Alcohol Heavy drinking increases risk Stress Chronic stress raises pressure What Can You Do About Hypertension? Action Why It Helps Check your blood pressure regularly You can’t manage what you don’t measure Reduce sodium intake Aim for under 2,300 mg/day Exercise 30 minutes daily Walking counts Lose 5-10% of body weight Even modest weight loss helps Limit alcohol Heavy drinking increases risk Manage stress Chronic stress keeps pressure high My Take I’m not a doctor. I’m a chemist who’s been in pharma long enough to know that hypertension is the silent killer. You can’t feel it. You can’t see it. But it’s there. Damaging your body every day. Good news? It’s manageable. Check your blood pressure. Eat less salt. Move more. Take your meds. If you haven’t checked your pressure in a while — do it today. Takes two minutes. Could save your life. Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff Reviewed by: Dr. Ayesha, Medical Reviewer Keep Reading — More from Medical Bluff 📌 Pillar Posts: Obesity and Diabetes in US — What 2026 Data Reveals Food as Medicine: Why Your Diet Matters More Than Ever 📌 Cluster Posts (Deep Dives): Medically Tailored Meals — What They Are and Who Needs Them Food Insecurity Rising: 7.4M Older Adults Affected  Why Younger Adults Are Getting Diabetes Faster — Coming Soon

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