Why Protein Matters
Whether you are recovering from an injury, surgery, exercise, or the normal wear and tear of daily life, your body needs enough protein to support the repair process. Protein provides the raw material your body uses to rebuild tissue and maintain lean muscle.

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This Week’s Nutrition Tip

Protein Supports Healing, Strength, and Metabolism

Protein can also help with body fat reduction because it helps you feel full longer, supports a healthy metabolism, and helps preserve and build lean muscle.

But protein alone does not “burn fat.” The real benefit happens when adequate protein is combined with resistance training, regular exercise, and consistent healthy habits.

  • Protein provides the building blocks: your body uses amino acids to repair and rebuild tissue.
  • Exercise gives the signal: movement and resistance training tell the body to maintain or build muscle.
  • Muscle supports metabolism: lean muscle helps your body use more energy throughout the day, even at rest.
  • Consistency matters: spreading protein throughout the day can be easier than trying to get it all in one meal.
A Simple Protein Example
As a general example, a 150-pound person may aim for about 105–150 grams of protein per day, depending on activity level, health goals, and recovery needs.
Protein needs vary from person to person. Your ideal amount may change based on your health history, activity level, recovery goals, and provider recommendations.
What to Focus On This Week
Build each meal around protein
Include a quality protein source with breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Pair protein with movement
Protein works best when your body also receives a movement signal.
Think recovery, not just muscle
Tendons, ligaments, skin, and bone all rely on nutrients for repair.
Stay consistent
Small daily nutrition habits can influence how your body performs tomorrow.
Ask Yourself This Week
Are you giving your body the building blocks it needs to heal, stay strong, and support a healthy metabolism? Your nutrition today helps determine how your body performs tomorrow.
Important Reminder
This is general wellness information and should not replace personalized medical or nutrition advice. If you have kidney disease, diabetes, a medical condition, dietary restrictions, or questions about your specific protein needs, speak with your healthcare provider before making major nutrition changes.

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