
IHCAN magazine Podcast
Are you a nutritional therapist or a student of nutritional therapy?
The IHCAN magazine Podcast delivers the expert education, insights, and inspiration you love from our magazine and events—all in a digestible 45-minute format.
Hosted by Kirsten Chick, a nutritional therapist with 20 years of experience in clinical practice, teaching, writing, and leading workshops.
Brought to you in collaboration with IHCAN magazine, IHCAN Conferences, and the IHCAN Summit.
IHCAN magazine Podcast
S3 Ep 9: ‘Nutrigenomics in practice’ featuring Anne Pemberton
Anne Pemberton is a functional medicine and nutrigenomics practitioner and trauma informed medical intuitive, and author of “Using nutrigenomics within personalised nutrition”. We talk about how the field of nutrigenomics has evolved in recent years, and how Anne has been at the forefront of setting out how to use DNA tests meaningfully in practice.
Anne discuss epigenetics, neurotransmitters, methylation, leaky gut and brain cells, neurodiversity, energetics, trauma, and so much more, peppered with generous gems of knowledge and wisdom along the way.
“So in effect you might give a folate or a B12 to help methylation for an example. But that isn’t truly what it’s about at all because there are all levels of what makes us sick, what makes the methylation cycle work ineffectively. And so we have to look at all those levels. So we’re looking at nutrition, lifestyle, minds, psyche... and then you’ve got to look at the environment that you’re in as well. What are the environmental triggers for causing gene expression?”
This episode is sponsored by Nutri Advanced, learn more at https://www.nutriadvanced.co.uk/
To buy Anne Pemberton's book, Using Nutrigenomics within Personalized Nutrition: A Practitioner's Guide (Personalized Nutrition and Lifestyle Medicine for Healthcare Practitioners), visit https://www.amazon.co.uk/Using-Nutrigenomics-Pemberton-Anne/dp/1848194137
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The IHCAN magazine Podcast is provided for professional education and debate and is not intended to be used by non-medically qualified individuals as a substitute for, or basis of, medical treatment.