Posts Tagged ‘COVID-19’

Year
Month
Category
Clear Filters
The Breath Which Leads All Creatures Is Also in the Spheres

Blame and Shame at Odds with Trust and Health

September 26, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Some learning comes only the hard way. In this pandemic, we see some countries cope well while others struggle. In the process, we can learn a great deal on many fronts. But the case study of Denmark is offering an especially vivid lesson in the value of avoiding blame and shame while building of trust […]

Read More
The Genius and the Crowd

Limited Booster Approval? Not Exactly

September 24, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Limited approval . . . heated debate . . . setback for booster plans. The pathway to rolling out booster shots has been torturous, for sure. But let’s be clear. As the dust clears, the approval of booster shots for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is hardly limited. Everyone over 65 can get it. Under 65, the […]

Read More
Schonberg Family

More Obesity in the Pandemic? Kids Yes, Adults Iffy

September 18, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

In our weight-obsessed culture, the talk about weight gain during the pandemic has been incessant. So the presumption is that obesity has risen in the pandemic. But the data to tell us if this is true is slow to emerge. And like everything else about this pandemic, it’s very likely that the effects have been […]

Read More
SARS-CoV-2

COVID-19, Antibodies, and Obesity

September 16, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Much energy these days seems to go into navigating between extreme views of important subjects. COVID-19 is a paralyzing threat or nothing to worry about. Vaccines are all we need to keep us safe from the pandemic or they’re lacking in safety and effectiveness. Having obesity will utterly destroy a person’s health, or it’s just […]

Read More
Does Income Inequality Kill People?

Does Income Inequality Kill People?

September 6, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

In a 2015 review now cited more than a thousand times, Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson do not equivocate. The relationship between income inequality and poor health meets criteria for causality. The causal path involves violence and other problems with social structures. So reducing inequality will improve public health and wellbeing. Predicting COVID-19 Deaths In […]

Read More
Georgetown Sweetgreen

Blame and Shame for Suffering: Obesity and COVID

September 4, 2021

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

Suffering creates a vacuum. But health stigma is always ready to fill that vacuum, so blame and shame flow in and amplify the suffering. This has long been the case with obesity. We’re now seeing it come into play with COVID and even with the intersection of COVID and obesity. This is called blaming the […]

Read More
Mask and Hat

Pandemic Stress, Fast Rising Obesity in Younger Kids

September 1, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

We thought we were done with this. But the stress of the pandemic is unrelenting. That stress is hitting families especially hard and it’s showing up in child health. Notably, more data is telling us that obesity is rising especially fast in younger kids. A new research letter in JAMA tells us that the prevalence […]

Read More
Uncertainty

Learning About Following the Uncertainty of Science

August 23, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

No two ways about it, we’re all getting a crash course in the uncertainty of science. It turns out that all those bumper stickers saying follow the science don’t mean exactly what we thought. Because COVID-19 is teaching us that the certainty we seek from science is not always there for us. Little more than […]

Read More
Cat Yoga

Looking at Evidence for Yoga in the Midst of a Pandemic

August 19, 2021

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It’s hard to deny that yoga has put an imprint on popular culture – especially popular concepts about fitness and wellbeing. It had an outsized role in defining a now dominant fashion trend – athleisure. Prior to the pandemic, yoga was a roughly ten billion dollar industry. But of course, the pandemic put a dent […]

Read More
Sign of Anger

Public Policy Based on Anger and Fear

August 8, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

Anger is circulating freely these days. It’s nothing new. But harnessing anger and its close cousin – fear – is a skill social media algorithms seem to have mastered. Thus, politicians see an opportunity and anger grows. Punitive public policy scores points with constituents stoked by anger and fear. It seldom solves problems, though. In […]

Read More

©2009-2026 ConscienHealth. All rights reserved. | Website Design by Mariela Antunes | Hosting by DTS