Posts Tagged ‘innovation’

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Hepatic Steatosis

Progress on NASH Treatments, But No Home Run Yet

November 22, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

This month has brought considerable progress on NASH treatments. Yet it’s hard to know when we will have real progress in medical care for this silent epidemic. Getting FDA to yes on new treatments seems to be a challenge. Nonetheless, we have news of two new studies that suggest promise for new NASH treatments. One […]

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OW2020: High Expectations for Semaglutide in Obesity

OW2020: High Expectations for Semaglutide in Obesity

November 10, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Saxenda (liraglutide) is on the brink of becoming a billion dollar drug for obesity. Yet its effectiveness in obesity is modest. On average, a person taking it might expect that their weight would go down by about eight percent. Of course, some people will have a much bigger benefit. But others will have less or […]

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Calm Ad Image, CNN Breaking News Screen

From Chaos Comes a Booming Market for Calm

November 8, 2020

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

Even chaos is a business opportunity. So it seems that the market for calm is booming – both as a state of mind and a popular health app. This week the company behind the health app named Calm seized an opportunity. They sponsored those jarring election news alerts on CNN that were delivering the precise […]

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A Piece of Sugar Cane

Food Tech: Sugar 2.0 Coming Your Way

October 25, 2020

Food & Nutrition, Food Industry, Health & Obesity, Health Policy

After two decades of really bad publicity, sugar is reinventing itself. Just last week, FDA finalized its rules for allulose, a rare but natural form of sugar. It looks and tastes a lot like regular sugar, though it’s about one third less sweet. But the really sweet deal is that the final rule from FDA […]

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Farmers Market

Food Shopping Now: Clicks, Lists, Frozen, and Local

September 9, 2020

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

Eight years of change packed into one month. COVID-19 has changed food shopping. All of a sudden, everything about the ways we hunt and gather our meals is different. For one thing, we’re making fewer trips and more clicks. But we’re buying more and buying in new ways. Professor Anna Nagurney tells the New York […]

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Haircut

Hair Clippings to Measure Dietary Health

August 12, 2020

Food & Nutrition, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Remember when haircuts were routine? Today, it seems, they’re a bit more special. The close contact they require makes it so. But new research also tells us that hair clippings from these close encounters can be valuable for dietary research. A team of researchers gathered up hair from barbershops and salons in diverse U.S. locations […]

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Lunchtime

Dietary Dark Matter: What Are We Eating?

July 23, 2020

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

Do you know what you’re having for lunch? You might think so. But in fact, the food that we are consuming is so complex, that we only have a vague idea of what’s in it. Through a project called FooDB, scientists have cataloged more than 70,000 biologically active chemicals that may be present in our […]

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Mutant Mouse Liver Mitochondria

The Tortured Pathway for a New NASH Treatment

June 30, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It’s tough getting good information these days. Good, factual information. Everybody wants to spin it. That’s undeniable in public policy. But it also seems to be true in drug development. Yesterday, the FDA definitively rejected an application from Intercept Pharmaceuticals for a new drug to treat NASH – nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. The company was shocked. Its […]

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Chincoteague Wild Ponies

More Than One Trick in Obesity Innovation

June 19, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

In pharmaceuticals, a one-trick pony is doomed to oblivion. Some companies have a big hit with a successful drug and then struggle to follow up with more innovation. So patents expire and sales dwindle. The company with one-trick innovation fades away. But with solid clinical trial results announced yesterday for two new drugs in obesity, […]

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African Green Monkey Kidney Cells

RCT: Metabolic Surgery Tops Best Medical Therapy

June 17, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) in surgery is quite a challenge. For good reason, people are reluctant to sign up for a study in which they might randomly get surgery. Or not. Surgery is a big decision and leaving it to chance doesn’t sit well with most people. Yet an RCT is the very best […]

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