Posts Tagged ‘health reporting’

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Absurd Face, illustration by Fazoffic

The Dumbest Headline of the Year About Obesity

January 10, 2026

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“People who come off slimming jabs regain weight four times faster than dieters.” The year is young, but already we have this contender for the dumbest headline of the year about obesity. It is helpful only as a reminder of how pervasive the implicit bias about obesity and its treatment is. Slimming Jabs? The headline […]

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Children Reading, painting by Pekka Halonen

The Five Stories Most Read in 2025 on ConscienHealth

December 22, 2025

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

We’ve had a lot to write about this year and you, our readers, have been doing a lot of reading. This running commentary is simply a labor of love. We don’t sell advertising or anything else here, but we do take pleasure when you read what we write and we do pay attention. So with […]

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Can Muscle Mass Give Us a <em>Younger Brain?</em>

Can Muscle Mass Give Us a Younger Brain?

December 19, 2025

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

If you want a younger, healthier brain, exercise that increases your muscle mass can help, says Gretchen Reynolds in the Washington Post: “More muscle mass was linked to younger brains in new research, suggesting resistance training can support long-term brain health.” She goes on to say: “If you need another reason to visit the gym […]

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Nuance Is the Victim in a War on the Science of Saturated Fat

Nuance Is the Victim in a War on the Science of Saturated Fat

December 17, 2025

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

A new systematic review in Annals of Internal Medicine underscores something we’ve long said in obesity and nutrition science. The science of saturated fat is complex, and nuance is its first casualty when the headlines start spinning. A Risk-Stratified Analysis Steen and colleagues conducted a risk-stratified analysis of 17 randomized trials. It is the largest […]

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The Athlete’s Muscular Flexion, painting by Osmar Schindler

The Importance and Uncertainties About Preserving Muscle

December 5, 2025

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

The attention that goes daily to the subject of preserving muscle and its importance is off the chart. Just this week a call to action about muscle loss in diabetes and a new systematic review on the effects of resistance exercise on cognitive function are demanding our attention. It is clear that preserving muscle as […]

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Brain Rot, still image from video by Singularidad Convergente

U.S. Obesity Prevalence: “Good News” or “Astounding” Surge?

October 17, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

When it comes to obesity, it seems everyone is looking for clickbait. Facts are incidental. So this week, we have wildly differing news headlines about U.S. obesity prevalence. The Harvard Gazette tells us we have an “astounding surge” in obesity prevalence. Axios tells us there’s “good news” on obesity prevalence. Where does the truth lie? […]

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Mango, photograph by Ivar Leidus

Magical Mango Thinking About Preventing Diabetes

October 7, 2025

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

“This high-sugar fruit may actually lower diabetes risk‚” says the press release from George Mason University. Lately, breathless headlines have bombarded us with magical mango thinking about preventing diabetes with this delicious fruit. Food is medicine, right? Well, not really. Food is food. Medicine is medicine. And the study that props up these sensational headlines […]

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Junk Food Can Scramble Memory in Just Four Days? Oh My!

Junk Food Can Scramble Memory in Just Four Days? Oh My!

October 2, 2025

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

The press office at the UNC School of Medicine wins the prize for clickbait this week with this gem: “Junk food can scramble memory in just four days.” That headline inspired some impressive creativity. From the seed of junk food to scramble memory sprouted headlines about rewired brains, disrupted memory circuits, cognitive decline, and brain […]

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Detail of Clock at Broadcasting House in London, design by Eric Gill

Drop Time Changes to Prevent Obesity? Good Luck with That

September 24, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

The Washington Examiner tells us we can prevent millions of cases of obesity and thousands of strokes simply by dropping twice-a-year time changes. “Study says.” Discover magazine says so, too. The Washington Post is a little more restrained. “We’d all be a little less prone to obesity and strokes if we ditched the switch.” Ditch […]

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The Last Angel, painting by Nicholas Roerich

Rising Temperatures Increase Added Sugar Intake? Not Exactly

September 12, 2025

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

Honestly, we share the underlying concern. Rising global temperature are a threat to our health and welfare. But twisting a scientific paper to make the point doesn’t help. It actually hurts the cause. New research in Nature Climate Change documents an association between added sugar consumption and rising temperatures. That’s a fair question to study. […]

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