research scientist @UTS_Science. online shopper. president of the Pun Appreciation Society. dinosaur lover. emoji abuser. nobel laureate...serial kidder.
Huge thank you to our keynote speaker Dr Nural Cokcetin @nural_c for her brilliant research presentation on the medicinal properties of honey. Absolutely fascinating ๐๐๐
Such a perfect start to our One Health & FungiSphere EMCR / HDR research symposium.
And @_jbeardsley_ Iโm so excited that Dr @nural_c is our keynote!! ๐๐ฏ๐ฆ ๐งซ๐ฌ
Donโt miss this @Sydney_ID One Health & FungiSphere research symposium. Wonderful to support our EMCRs!
Registration details below โฌ๏ธ
@DeplazesEvelyne@DrCFord@FranklinWomen @WomenSciAUST Thanks Evelyne! Keen to help if I can - i look at gut micro and prebiotics (with honey as a specialty!)
@Nutritionprof1@Examinecom We've found about a tablespoon (20g) a day has a positive effect. You can have it straight from the spoon, or on toast, in your yoghurt, or even in your tea or coffee
@Nutritionprof1@Examinecom Hello- we look at a range of honey from different Australian floral sources. All had some benefits- doesn't seem to be linked to a particular type! Suspect most honeys will have prebiotic benefits, and that they all do slightly different things in the gut.
"Honey is an extremely effective antibacterial agent against many types of bacteria, including drug-resistant superbugs." -Dr. Nural Cokcetin, researcher at the ithree institute, University of Technology Sydney
Full Interview: https://t.co/oOb12I8Vx9
#examined#honey#beevomit