When one of the expert nutritionists from Content Checked
Holdings, Inc. (OTCQB: CNCK) was featured last month in an article on
heavily-trafficked foodie site The Daily Meal, which is geared toward everyone
from pro cooks and industry insiders to savvy diners, the spot showcased
exactly the kind of actionable intelligence the company’s apps were designed to
provide. The insights provided by Content Checked’s Registered Dietitian, Tory
Tedrow, CNSC, regarding the importance of foods like lentils in a diet as a key
source of iron (http://dtn.fm/qVh0j) were on target for this article and
indicative of CNCK’s expertise.
Tedrow explained how iron deficiency anemia is the natural
result when people don’t have enough foods containing iron in their diets and
that fatigue, weakness, and shortness of breath are some of the common
symptoms. Offering solutions for readers, such as the helpful tip that
combining iron-rich foods with others that contain high levels of vitamin C
(such as oranges) will help maximize iron uptake by the body, is another prime
example of insight that CNCK provides its users through its apps.
Such important dietary information is precisely the kind of
nutritionist-driven intelligence that users can get access to with the swipe of
a finger using the company’s family of mobile apps. The apps were built to
provide people who have specific dietary restrictions with a quick and simple
answer to whether or not a product is suitable for their dietary needs. The
company’s three apps – including ContentChecked for food allergies,
SugarChecked for added sugars and MigraineChecked for migraine triggers – allow
users to quickly scan a product’s barcode with their smartphones and gain
access to a rich database of nutritional information.
The ability to provide feedback on over 70% (and growing) of
all food products in the U.S. with the swipe of a finger is a powerful weapon
in the fight against food related issues like allergies and diabetes. By using
Content Checked’s apps routinely, end users gain healthy insights along the
way. Users become educated over time by the apps, which steer them clear of bad
decisions and can, therefore, also help to steer them in the right direction,
nutritionally speaking.
An app like SugarChecked is a prime example of the type of
tool the CDC’s Division of Diabetes Translation was referring to when it
recommended to its email user base that diabetics should utilize the growing
number of apps designed to do everything from track blood sugar levels to help
more closely define eating habits.
For more information, visit www.contentchecked.com
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