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Nutrition

Nutrition tooling is designed for consistency and honesty: macros, meals, and optional AI assistance you can review — not a prescription for treating medical conditions.

Does PeakGevity track macros and meals?
Yes. You can set targets, log meals, and use library workflows designed for speed. Estimates from photos, barcodes, or natural language can be wrong — always verify when precision matters.
How accurate are calories and macros?
Any food database or estimator introduces error. We aim for practical tracking, not laboratory precision. Treat logged values as directional unless you are using verified portions and labels.
How does AI meal planning work?
AI can propose meals and grocery-style ideas based on your goals and constraints. You stay in control: review, edit, and approve. AI can be wrong; it is not medical nutrition therapy.
Does PeakGevity recommend supplements or medications?
The product may surface educational context in some flows, but it does not replace a clinician or pharmacist for prescriptions, contraindications, or dosing decisions.
Can I use PeakGevity if I have a medical condition?
Only with guidance from your care team. The app is general wellness software, not a treatment plan for diabetes, eating disorders, pregnancy, or other conditions without professional oversight.
Does PeakGevity track micronutrients?
Coverage depends on the food database and product surface area. Treat micronutrient views as informational unless your clinician directs otherwise.
Can I log alcohol or restaurant meals?
Yes — logging should reflect real life. Estimates for mixed meals will be noisier; use patterns over time rather than single-day precision.

These answers are marketing and support guidance, not legal or medical advice. FAQ structured data (JSON-LD) is emitted on this page for eligible search features — verify with Search Console after launch.

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