Posts Tagged ‘physical activity’

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The Five Biggest Stories of 2025 in Nutrition and Physical Activity

The Five Biggest Stories of 2025 in Nutrition and Physical Activity

December 27, 2025

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

This was a year of great change in nutrition, physical activity, and wellness. RFK Jr. and his MAHA agenda came in with the new administration, “guns-a-blazing,” as our president might say. The result has been some very interesting cross-currents and attention-grabbing headlines. Here are five of the biggest stories we’ve been watching this year. 1. […]

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Walking the Talk of a Healthy Lifestyle in Cardiology

Walking the Talk of a Healthy Lifestyle in Cardiology

August 28, 2025

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

New research in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology tells us that walking the talk of a healthy lifestyle for preventing heart disease is not so easy. Perhaps the most striking number from this research relates to dietary recommendations. The American College of Cardiology (ACC) recommends a whole-food plant-based diet for cardiovascular disease […]

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Steps of the Palace at Versailles, painting by Henri Eugène Le Sidaner

Yes, Walkable Cities Lead People to Walk More

August 14, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

An excellent new study in Nature points us to a nudge that really does work. Walkable cities really do lead people to walk more. In fact, when people move to a more walkable city from a less walkable one, researchers found that they walk an average of about 1,100 more steps every day. The reverse […]

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Inflated Promises of Exercise for Fitness and a Longer Life

Inflated Promises of Exercise for Fitness and a Longer Life

May 30, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

To be sure, exercise has many benefits – including the widely accepted benefit of fitness and a longer life. But a new study of causal inference linking fitness to reduced mortality suggests those benefits have been exaggerated. The problem is an old one: Confounding. The senior author of the new study, Marcel Ballin, explains: “We […]

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Backlit Keyboard

Diet and Exercise Might Not Overcome Too Much Sitting

December 9, 2024

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

Eat healthy and get your exercise. It is a straightforward framework for dealing with obesity. But that simple prescription of diet and exercise for preventing obesity overlooks a critical factor – the prolonged sitting time very often required by work and school. A recent study of data from young adult twins showed that sitting time […]

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The Wedding of the Bohemian

The Evolutionary Mismatch of Sedentary Lives

December 3, 2024

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

“This seems like a landmark paper in my books and a call from the other side of the energy balance equation. We seem built to be a highly physically active species, not sedentary office workers and couch dwellers.” With these words, Professor Emeritus Jennie Brand-Miller seized our attention today. She was writing about a new […]

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Are Standing Desks Destined to Gather Dust?

Are Standing Desks Destined to Gather Dust?

November 13, 2024

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Standing desks arrived with high hopes of countering the health risks of a sedentary office lifestyle, promising to reduce heart disease and improve circulation. However, recent research in the International Journal of Epidemiology casts doubt on whether simply swapping sitting for standing delivers these benefits. Cardiovascular Risk Benefit? In a study of over 83,000 adults, […]

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Video Game Jam

Video Gaming, Not Exercise, Makes Your Brain Younger?

October 21, 2024

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“We conclude that exercise and video gaming have differential effects on the brain, which may help individuals tailor their lifestyle choices to promote mental and cognitive health, respectively, across the lifespan.” This conclusion comes from a preprint published on PsyArXiv. Science, health, and lifestyle reporters got even more bold with their conclusions. For instance, the […]

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Active Volcano at Fimmvörðuháls in 2010

Implicit Bias: “Just Be More Active to Overcome Obesity”

March 29, 2024

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

A fascinating new study is prompting some very clickable headlines this week. It is all about the interaction of genetic risk for obesity and physical activity. It shows that in people with higher genetic risk scores for obesity, the association between physical activity (using daily step counts as a surrogate) and BMI is different than […]

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Exercise Self-Reports Predict Less Benefit for Men Than Women?

Exercise Self-Reports Predict Less Benefit for Men Than Women?

February 29, 2024

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

What could explain the observation that self-reports of exercise predict less of a benefit for men than women? In the Journal of the American College of Cardiology researchers nimbly leap to a conclusion that women get greater gains in mortality risk reduction from “equivalent doses” of physical activity. But would men exaggerate their self-reports? When […]

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