Posts Tagged ‘bias’

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Twin Bing Cherry

Bing! One Less Dose of Explicit Weight Bias

July 4, 2020

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

Change comes in increments. Because humans are wired for bias, the bias against people at higher weights is especially hard to escape. But we take heart from explicit signs of such bias erased. Small victories count, too. This week, one such victory came when Bing took down an appalling entry for childhood obesity, filled with […]

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Mutant Mouse Liver Mitochondria

The Tortured Pathway for a New NASH Treatment

June 30, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It’s tough getting good information these days. Good, factual information. Everybody wants to spin it. That’s undeniable in public policy. But it also seems to be true in drug development. Yesterday, the FDA definitively rejected an application from Intercept Pharmaceuticals for a new drug to treat NASH – nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. The company was shocked. Its […]

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Black Lives Matter

Racism Baked into Health and Obesity Care

June 22, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

We are in a moment when life and death and race and ethnicity are forcing conversations that White people politely avoid. It’s uncomfortable. But the brutal deaths of Black people at the hands of police have become impossible to ignore. And in the COVID-19 pandemic, Black and Latino people are dying in numbers that make […]

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It Is Cholera to Blame

Really? Blame the Food Industry for COVID-19?

June 21, 2020

Food & Nutrition, Food Industry, Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

We’ve seen quite a range of responses to the observation that obesity leads to worse outcomes with COVID-19. But most of them are unhelpful. First, of course, was denial. Now we have the anger phase. Over in the U.K., folks are murmuring that we should blame the food industry. Writing in the BMJ, Monique Tan, […]

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Citrus Traffic Light

What If the Traffic Light Doesn’t Work?

June 20, 2020

Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

The concept of a traffic light diet is a mainstay for clinics that treat childhood obesity. It seems to be useful for shaping healthy childhood eating behaviors. In its Evidence Analysis Library, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics says it’s effective. In fact, it even says the evidence is strong for it. But if you […]

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Drying Tobacco

The Odd Case of Tobacco, Nicotine, and COVID-19

June 14, 2020

Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

In the early reports of patients in the hospital for COVID-19, careful observers noticed an odd pattern. COVID-19 is primarily a respiratory syndrome and smoking badly damages lungs. But hospitalization was not more likely for smokers. In fact, it was less likely. This correlation kept appearing in sample after sample  – though with substantial uncertainty. […]

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Woman Nursing Her Son

Correlation, Causality, Breastfeeding, and Obesity

June 12, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

The distinction between correlation and causality is basic to any serious scientist. But in PLOS Genetics yesterday, scientists toss it out the window. Yanyan Wu et al found an association between breastfeeding and obesity. Then they lept to claim cause and effect. Right up front in their title, they make the bold claim. “Exclusive breastfeeding […]

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Am I Next?

Attention Span, Health Disparities, and Obesity

June 11, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

America is having a moment. Civil unrest and a still-unfolding pandemic display a gaping wound in the public life of this nation. Disparities in justice and health are impossible to ignore and it shows up in the disparate effects of obesity on racial and ethnic minorities. Attention Span and the Possibilities for Change As distressing […]

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Fire and Ice

A Dichotomy of Extremes on Obesity: Bigotry and Denial

June 5, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

These are times that present us with extreme but false choices. Lives versus livelihoods. Chaos versus oppression. Add to that list an extreme, false dichotomy on obesity. At one extreme, we have two fat acceptance advocates advocates arguing that concern about obesity is nothing more than an expression of racism. At the other, a conservative […]

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The Ear of Grain

False Prophets of Nutrition and Quick Fixes for Obesity

June 1, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

Complexity makes the brain hurt. Both nutrition and obesity present challenges that resist simple answers. There is no one healthful way to eat, though many false prophets of nutrition will preach that they have the one true way. Quick fixes for obesity are rare, though many people are eager to tell us that they know […]

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