✅ What Dr Pal says
According to the article from The Economic Times:
- Dr Pal states that fruits like kiwi and avocado often get all the superfood attention, but guava — being much more affordable in India — gives comparable (or even superior) benefits for gut health.
- He points out that in 100 g of guava you get nearly 5 g of fibre, which helps digestion and may ease constipation.
- He also highlights that guava has more vitamin C than oranges, plus antioxidants and a low glycemic index — all contributing to its “superfood” status in his view.
🎯 The science behind it
- Fibre: Dietary fibre helps with gut motility, supports the microbiome (i.e., the good gut bacteria), and can reduce constipation/irregularity.
- Vitamin C & antioxidants: These help reduce oxidative stress, support immune function, and may reduce inflammation — all of which indirectly support gut health.
- Low glycemic index: Foods that don’t spike blood sugar sharply may help reduce metabolic stress on the body, including the gut.
There are studies confirming that fruits high in fibre + antioxidants contribute to better gut-health and overall wellbeing.
🧮 How to use guava for gut health
- Eat it fresh: A simple snack of guava after a meal or as part of breakfast.
- Use as dessert: Instead of processed sweets, have a bowl of chopped guava.
- Mix into salads: Add diced guava into a vegetable salad for fibre and flavour.
- Make a smoothie: Blend guava + a little yoghurt (for probiotics) for gut-friendly combo.
- Portion: Aim for ~100 g (as Dr Pal used in his statement) which gives beneficial fibre + micronutrients.
⚠️ Things to keep in mind
- If you have gastrointestinal conditions (e.g., irritable bowel syndrome) where high fibre or certain fruits trigger symptoms, you’ll want to introduce it gradually.
- While guava is good, it’s not a substitute for a balanced diet, probiotic foods, enough water, adequate sleep and activity. Dr Pal emphasises micro-habits beyond just one food.
- Quality matters: Choose ripe, fresh guavas; avoid ones with mould, damage or over-ripe spots where spoilage starts.
📌 Why this matters
In India, superfoods like avocado or imported berries are expensive and not always accessible. Identifying a widely available, low-cost fruit with strong benefits helps make healthy eating more realistic for many people — which is exactly the point Dr Pal is making.

