Posts Tagged ‘diet’

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More Weight Loss with a Diet of Less Processed Food

More Weight Loss with a Diet of Less Processed Food

August 5, 2025

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

A new study yesterday in Nature Medicine will surely add fuel to the fire of people who believe we can simply blame ultra-processed foods for the rise in obesity over the last four decades. The design of the study was solid – a randomized controlled crossover study. Just the kind of thing that sticklers for […]

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House of Cards

The House of Cards That Links Diet, Obesity, and Health

January 26, 2025

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

The most pervasive way of thinking about obesity is to simply regard it as “a diet-related disease.” But a new paper in Nature Food suggests we may be misleading ourselves. That’s because of a fundamental problem in the data that links patterns of diet to obesity and health. An impressive collection of scientists examined the […]

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Catherinettes in Paris,1932

Diet & Exercise: Primary, Co-Equal, or Simply a Good Idea?

December 27, 2024

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Diet and exercise is a dominant concept in obesity care that’s in the midst of an identity crisis. In The Atlantic, Daniel Engber sums up one point of view, writing: “Ozempic killed diet and exercise. Doctors might be slow to admit it, but Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs are making dieting and exercise obsolete.” While […]

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Gravestones in St. Anne's Chapel, Malbork Castle, Poland

The Weight Watchers CEO Is Out – Is the Diet Industry Dead?

September 30, 2024

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity

The abrupt and immediate departure of Sima Sistani as CEO of Weight Watchers prompts us to ask: Is the diet industry dead? Weight Watchers grew from its origins in the early 1960s to become the iconic brand that dominated this field. For decades now, the popular impulse to reject diet culture has been growing. In […]

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Just How Broadly Can We Define Diet-Related Disease?

Just How Broadly Can We Define Diet-Related Disease?

September 15, 2024

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

“Poor diet is the leading cause of mortality in the U.S. due to the direct relationship with diet-related chronic diseases.” Emily Matthews and Emma Kurnat-Thoma tell us this in a recent article for Frontiers in Public Health. Rationalizing this conclusion is easy enough. In Nutrients, Sareen Gropper defines diet-related disease to incorporate almost all of […]

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Tripping Over the Relationship Between Obesity and PCOS

Tripping Over the Relationship Between Obesity and PCOS

March 14, 2024

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

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrine disorder affecting young women, with effects that can span from adolescence to life after menopause. It is a complex condition and despite being so common, it’s still poorly understood. Quite often, obesity occurs coincidentally with PCOS. This coincidence has led to the kind of mistakes that […]

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End of the Season

Will 2024 Mark the End of “Diet Season?”

January 4, 2024

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity

It is beginning to seem like an anachronism. January has long marked the beginning of “diet season.” Weight Watchers, Nutrisystem, Jenny Craig, Atkins, and many other businesses depend on this annual weight loss ritual to rack up their biggest sales of the year. Diet resolutions typically stick for only a few months, though. Some time […]

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Roundhouse Wipers Having Lunch

Seeking a Good Relationship with Food

September 27, 2023

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

Travelling on a train recently you couldn’t help but overhear two women deep in conversation about a mutual obsession with food, including emotional triggers that pushed them towards chocolate and pizza. They shared feeling guilty about a perceived lack of willpower around food and regularly rummaging through the fridge looking for tasty treats to help […]

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The People’s Land

Sweeteners: Different Effects in Different People?

August 23, 2022

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

To start an impassioned discussion on nutrition is easy. Bring up non-nutritive sweeteners. Some people see them as a plague in the food supply. Others insist upon evidence to back up such dire claims and can see only fragments propping up presumptions about harms that are yet to be documented. But once again, a study […]

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Diverse Thinking About the Complexity of Obesity

Diverse Thinking About the Complexity of Obesity

July 27, 2022

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Health Policy

It’s a lot. Writing for USA Today, Karen Weintraub has produced a deep dive into diverse thinking about the complexity of obesity. If you thought USA Today was a place for McNuggets* of superficial reporting, think again. In six parts, with more than 18,000 words, Weintraub has done quite well in painting a picture of […]

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