Christina Heiser

3.1K posts

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Christina Heiser

Christina Heiser

@xtinaph

Content marketer, health writer, founder of Celiac Self-Care newsletter

New York, NY เข้าร่วม Nisan 2009
972 กำลังติดตาม1.1K ผู้ติดตาม
Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
Participating in Dry January? I put together a guide to how quitting drinking can improve your gut health, tips for making the most of a dry month, and recommendations for a few of my new fave gluten-free NA drinks. Head to my link in bio to read the full post!
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
I’m counting down my top 10 most popular celiac newsletters of the year, from my deep dive into whether sourdough bread is gluten-free to my guide to dating with celiac to my essay on how quitting drinking improved my life. Catch up at my link in bio!
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
Head to my link in bio to read the full post and subscribe to my newsletter.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
My gluten-free label reading guide is live! I explain how to tell if a packaged food in the US is gluten-free/celiac-safe, the top gluten red flags to look for, and which ingredients are commonly thought to contain gluten but actually don’t.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
I was told I was not being “kind and courteous” last night when I asked a woman if she ate her dry shampoo after she said gluten in the formula caused her flaky scalp and that her flaky scalp was a celiac response. Yet her comments spreading misinfo were allowed to stay up. 🥲
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
The amount of times I have to explain to people in online celiac groups that gluten can’t be absorbed through the skin and their beauty products are NOT to blame for their skin reaction is astounding 🤦🏻‍♀️
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
My toxic trait is getting into arguments with people in online celiac groups
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
I’m sharing my gluten-free label reading guide tomorrow in my newsletter—sign up at my link in bio so you can get it delivered to your inbox in the morning!
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
Plus, those who’ve reached out to Hershey for more info have been told that the reason they don’t add the GF label to the holiday shapes is that it would be cost prohibitive since this is a seasonal item.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
PSA: The Reese’s holiday shapes ARE gluten-free and you CAN eat them if you have celiac disease. There’s a myth circulating that the holiday shapes aren’t gluten-free because they don’t have a gluten-free label—but it’s recently been debunked by a few celiac dietitians.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
I’m sharing my gluten-free label reading guide tomorrow in my newsletter—sign up at my link in bio so you can get it delivered to your inbox in the morning!
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
What’s more, Gluten-Free Watchdog commissioned a test and found that the trees specifically contain less than 5 ppm of gluten (20 ppm is the limit allowed in GF foods). There are no gluten-containing ingredients in this product.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
The moral of the story? Don’t believe everything you read on social media. Get good at reading labels, doing your researching from trusted sources, and contact the manufacturer for more information if you’re not sure if something is gluten-free or celiac-safe.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
This product is not certified gluten-freea, nor does it contain gluten-free oats, so I wouldn’t eat it at as a celiac. I’ll be unpacking all of the red flags like this to watch out for on a food label in my next newsletter.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
Because of this risk of, at this time experts advise to only eat oat products that are certified gluten-free (which means they’ve been tested by a third party and verified to contain less than 20 ppm of gluten) or explicitly state gluten-free oats in the ingredients.
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Christina Heiser
Christina Heiser@xtinaph·
In writing up my guide to gluten-free label reading for next week, I wanted to share an example of a product sold in the US that is labeled gluten-free but not deemed celiac-safe by experts. How can this be?
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