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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