It is important for animal advocates to be intellectually honest about the balance of the pros and cons to health from abstaining from animal products (being vegan). If they are not intellectually honest, their arguments will be discredited and discounted in the future by the general public.
Unfortunately, I think some of the popular medical doctors advocating for plant based diets, including Neal Barnard and Joel Fuhrman, have gotten a reputation for only presenting one side of the evidence. Similarly, I am not sure if the 2018 documentary Game Changers helped or damaged the arguments for plant-based diets since it was widely reviewed as insufficiently sober in its handling of a complex subject (https://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/a29067926/the-game-changers-movie-fact-check/). If I am wrong about this I would be happy to be corrected.
I have heard arguments recently that one of the most important components of healthy aging is minimizing sarcopenia, and this cannot be feasibly done without large doses of protein, including animal protein, spread out throughout the day (https://peterattiamd.com/donlayman/). These arguments are being advanced by respected academics, who are also arguing against school lunches going plant-based.
If animal advocates are going to suggest that the public abstain from consuming animal products, I believe they should address the sarcopenia point, and other similar points, directly and credibly. If this has already been done, I apologize, and would request that someone direct me to those materials. If it has not, I would like to suggest that this is a void that would be helpful to fill.
Interesting that some people disagree. Would love to hear what you disagree with and if you can change my mind with research that goes against the above. Otherwise I have to consider that you either disagree with the above being important for you specifically or you think the claims I made are wrong.
I mostly agree with the spirit of this post because my experience with vegans is that they’ve been overconfident in positive health impacts from veganism (essentially hearing what they want to hear from the research) because of motivated reasoning and the underlying belief that animal suffering trumps any potential negative health impacts. That very well may be true, but it has always been difficult for me to trust vegans claiming good health impact (meat eaters are potentially worse, to be fair) because I’ve always had the impression that they aren’t being as rigurous and intellectually honest as possible.
If you want more people to become vegan, easing these fears is necessary. Otherwise you either get people like me who waited years to stop eating meat or people who leave veganism as soon as they form a long-term relationship or get kids.