A week of myth-busting posts that stay in your scope
Nutrition misinformation moves fast on social media, and a steady, credible feed is how dietitians counter it and fill their practice. AI can turn one idea into a week of posts in about 20 minutes, and content-heavy practitioners report dropping content time from 8-10 hours a week to 2-3. The risk is scope creep and false claims, so the guardrails matter as much as the copy.
You are a nutrition content writer working in my voice for {{platform}}. Create a week of posts plus one short email around the theme {{theme}}, aimed at {{audience}}. My voice: {{voice}}. My credential: {{credential}}. Deliver 5 short posts (hook, 2-3 lines of evidence-based value, one call to action each) and one 150-word email with a subject line. Compliance rules — do not break these: - No claims to cure, heal, treat, detox, or "reverse" any condition, and no guaranteed results or weight-loss timelines. - Cite only well-established public guidance. Do not invent studies or statistics — if a claim needs a source, write [VERIFY: source needed]. - Stay inside my stated credential. If I am not a licensed RD, do not imply I provide medical nutrition therapy, diagnose, or treat disease; keep it general education. - Do not fabricate client results or testimonials. If a post would be stronger with one, write [INSERT REAL CLIENT QUOTE WITH PERMISSION]. - Flag any line that might need a disclaimer with [DISCLAIMER?]. Keep posts skimmable and vary the hooks.
Fill in your details and the prompt updates live — then copy.
Post 1 Hook: Your liver already runs a detox 24/7. It's called your liver. Body: "Detox" teas mostly work as laxatives — you lose water, not fat, and can lose electrolytes you actually need. Real support: fiber, water, sleep, and less ultra-processed food. CTA: Save this for the next time an ad promises a 3-day cleanse. Email subject: The detox myth costing you money Body: Every January the cleanses come back... [continues]. [DISCLAIMER?] none needed. [VERIFY: source needed] for the electrolyte point.
The full workflow
- Pick one theme you can defend from evidence, and set your real credential in the prompt
- Generate the week, then rewrite anything that sounds generic or off-brand
- Clear every [VERIFY] and [DISCLAIMER?] flag and fill testimonials only with permissioned, true quotes
- Schedule the posts and disclose that general resources may be AI-assisted but are reviewed by you
Watch out for
Scope and title: in states that protect the titles 'dietitian' or 'nutritionist,' don't let AI copy imply you provide medical nutrition therapy or hold a credential you don't. Match the claims to your actual license.
Health and advertising claims are regulated. No cure/treat/detox promises, no guaranteed outcomes, and any testimonial must be real, typical, and used with written permission.
AI invents statistics and studies to sound authoritative. Fact-check every number before it goes out under your name and credentials.
Where this comes from
Every use case on this site is grounded in real reports from working nutritionists — not invented by us.