Posts Tagged ‘bias’

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Ultra-Processing of Study Results in Nutrition

May 29, 2023

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

Expert opinion holds that ultra-processed food is not a good thing. So it’s quite natural to expect that helping people resist the convenience and taste of this ubiquitous type of food will help with dietary health outcomes. So natural that it’s quite easy to dismiss inconvenient, unexpected findings. A little ultra-processing of study results in […]

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Personal Convictions, Money, and Conflicts

Personal Convictions, Money, and Conflicts

April 26, 2023

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

Tamar Haspel is angry. She notes that many of the people expressing righteous concerns about advanced obesity medicines are also folks who have a book to sell you. Or a diet or a supplement or an exercise program. Personal convictions, money, and the conflicts that go with all of that are a jumbled mess when […]

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Menu

Restaurant Menus for Fewer Cancer Deaths?

April 19, 2023

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

Breathtaking. That’s the only word we can find to describe the claims coming from a cost effectiveness study of calorie labeling on restaurant menus for preventing cancer deaths. Published yesterday in BMJ Open, this study is already generating headlines like this one: “Thanks to calorie-counting menus, fewer Americans are dying of obesity-related cancers” Making an […]

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Looking Away from Care for Severe Obesity

Looking Away from Care for Severe Obesity

April 17, 2023

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Writing about The Whale in Psychology Today, counselor Kari Anderson tells us the movie brings a story into view that we look away from too often. “Real people with real stories are suffering, feeling trapped in their own bodies and unable to leave their homes,” she writes. This is uncomfortable viewing for many people because, […]

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Egrets from Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing

A “Simple” Solution for Diabetes and Obesity

April 10, 2023

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Writing in the Guardian, Jon Ungoed-Thomas tells us he’s stumbled upon a simple solution for diabetes and obesity. A low-carb diet will cure them both! In an observational study of patients in a general practice who volunteered to religiously follow a low-carb diet, they found that patients could lose weight and put diabetes in remission. […]

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Obesity Meds Cause People to Lose Their Minds

Obesity Meds Cause People to Lose Their Minds

April 4, 2023

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

Clickbait headlines are running wild on the subject of advanced obesity medicines – even in formerly responsible news sources. Over the weekend, for example, USA Today warned us that there’s dark magic in these medicines. It seems the mere availability of new and more effective obesity meds can cause people to lose their minds. They […]

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Justine Greening Concludes the Nutrition for Growth Conference

In Nutrition and Obesity Everyone Has an Agenda

April 2, 2023

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Food Industry, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

We are living in an age of low trust. Trust in scientists declined through the pandemic and around the world, trust in elected officials registers at very low levels. Because of this, we are absolutely not surprised with the frequent finger-pointing and stories about conflicts of interest in nutrition and obesity. These are subjects that […]

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Exuberant Claims for Exercise and Brain Health

Exuberant Claims for Exercise and Brain Health

March 31, 2023

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“Exercise with a buddy, your brain will thank you,” says the Washington Post. “Improve Your Memory, Problem-Solving, and Mental Processing Speeds in Just 6 Minutes,” promises Inc. This is just a small sample of the exuberant claims about exercise and brain health coming at us from news media. There’s only one problem. Some of it […]

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The Mistake of the Loves

Obesity: Learning from Public Health Mistakes

March 30, 2023

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Reuters reported yesterday that the World Health Association is considering, for the first time ever, adding a drug used for diabetes and obesity to the WHO essential medicines list. The specific drug under consideration is liraglutide. This would represent a step toward learning from public health mistakes of the past to make a course correction […]

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Rose and Amélie

Anecdotes and Studies of Lived Experiences with Obesity

March 19, 2023

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

People want to be seen and heard. To feel like they matter. But in research and policy related to obesity, this fact was long neglected for many reasons. The principal reasons have much to do with stigma and the explicit dehumanization of people with this disease. With explicit efforts to overcome these issues, we see […]

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