Posts Tagged ‘bias’

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Threads and Hands in Blue

Three Threads in Public Discourse on Obesity

March 10, 2023

Anyone who doesn’t think a major shift in public perceptions about obesity is not underway has simply not been paying attention. Public discourse about this complex chronic disease is more intense (albeit sometimes frustrating) than we have seen in more than two decades of work on obesity. We see a pattern of three threads in […]

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The Sweet Tooth

“Fake” Sugar, Speculation, and Health Reporting

March 9, 2023

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

Reporting on supposed dangers of “fake” sugar is a self-replicating genre that seemingly never fades. The Washington Post this week published a prime example, telling readers: “The food industry says sugar substitutes help people manage their weight and reduce intake of added sugars. But studies suggest that fake sugars can also have unexpected effects on […]

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Cardiff Bay Evening at Roald Dahl Plass

Is It Possible to Fix the Hate in Literature?

February 23, 2023

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

It’s interesting to watch people get riled up about the censorship of Roald Dahl. The Roald Dahl Story Company owns the rights to his books and has worked with Puffin Books to edit out offensive words so “Dahl’s wonderful stories and characters continue to be enjoyed by all children today.” In collaboration with Inclusive Minds, […]

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Evidence for What Works in Obesity Prevention

Evidence for What Works in Obesity Prevention

February 21, 2023

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“This childhood obesity prevention program works best,” says the headline from Futurity. It’s a catchy headline with a catch. The catch is that there’s absolutely no evidence in the research this story highlights regarding the effectiveness of programs for actually preventing obesity. None. Works in this context apparently means that the obesity prevention program runs […]

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Comfortable Opinions, Uncomfortable Thinking

Comfortable Opinions, Uncomfortable Thinking

February 19, 2023

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

Sixty years ago, President John F. Kennedy warned the graduating class at Yale that too often “We enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.” Public discourse on the subject of obesity right now is certainly bringing that thought into vivid view. Over and over again, we hear supposed experts expressing their comfortable […]

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Glass Not Full

Are Semaglutide Supply Shortages Over?

February 3, 2023

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

This is a story that’s been on repeat for well over a year. Novo Nordisk announced its business results for the full year of 2022 this week and declared that supply issues with Wegovy are over – almost. But the fact is that it’s not at all clear that the problem of supply shortages for […]

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The Goldfish

Obesity Care for the Few and the Wealthy

December 27, 2022

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It’s nothing new. Overwhelmingly and for a long time it has been true that obesity care is mainly available to the few and the wealthy. This is the inevitable result of multiple forms of bias that collide in the chronic disease of obesity. Healthcare has a bias for serving the the wealthy. Health systems also […]

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People of Chilmark

The Bigot in the Machine

December 7, 2022

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

We live in an age of algorithms and machine learning, says Professor Barbara Fister. But we should be aware that a bigot can find its way into the machine. She explains: “A provider of healthcare decision-making software that helps to manage care for some 200 million people each year wanted to create an algorithm to […]

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The Gap Between Science and Culture in Obesity

The Gap Between Science and Culture in Obesity

November 22, 2022

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

This is a note of gratitude to Julia Belluz. In a guest essay for the New York Times, she writes beautifully and accessibly about a great gap. It is the gap between science and popular culture in the matter of obesity. She does it while reporting on the recent Royal Society meeting about the causes […]

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Children and Sunny Trees

OW2022: A Huge Advance for Obesity in Teens

November 3, 2022

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Mind-blowing. That’s how pediatric obesity medicine expert Claudia Fox described the outcomes with semaglutide for teens with obesity at OW2022 yesterday. As she and a panel of experts in the field discussed this huge advance for teens with obesity, every seat and space to stand in the ballroom was taken. Daniel Weghuber presenting these results […]

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