That looks like the start of a headline 👀 — but it’s cut off. Before I run with it, quick check:
Do you want this to be:
- a click-style headline (viral / dramatic),
- a science-accurate health headline, or
- the start of a full article?
To help you decide, here are a few responsible, accurate ways that headline is commonly finished (no hype, no myths):
- “Doctors reveal that eating eggs causes no increase in heart disease for most people”
- “Doctors reveal that eating eggs causes longer-lasting fullness and improved protein intake”
- “Doctors reveal that eating eggs causes cholesterol levels to rise in some individuals—but not most”
- “Doctors reveal that eating eggs causes benefits for brain and eye health”
⚠️ Heads-up: headlines claiming eggs “cause inflammation,” “cause heart attacks,” or “cause diabetes” are usually misleading or taken out of context.
Tell me what you’re aiming for (news, social media, school, blog, dramatic vs factual), and I’ll finish it cleanly—and correctly.