Posts Tagged ‘physical activity’

Year
Month
Category
Clear Filters
Pushing Weights with Two Arms

Forget Weight? Focus on It? Or Meet in the Middle?

September 21, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

To say that our culture obsesses about weight and body image is possibly an understatement. Athleisure togs serve to emphasize it. People dress to look like they’re going for a run, to the gym, or a yoga class. And yet, this obsession divides us. Two new publications today offer a sharp contrast on this subject. […]

Read More
Riders and Walkers at a Parkway

Setting the Bar Too High at 10,000 Steps Daily?

September 13, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

We’ve known all along that 10,000 steps per day is a goal for physical activity that came to us out of thin air. People latched on to it because it was a nice, round number. It was memorable. But the fact is that it’s arbitrary. In fact, evidence now tells us that one size does […]

Read More
Sideways

Exercise: Energy In, Energy Out, Energy Sideways

August 30, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Exercise for weight loss is a durable concept. Some advocates even push for food labels to describe the exercise necessary to burn calories in a food serving. But the premise for this is false. A new study in Current Biology explains the problem better than ever before. It turns out that when a person does […]

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
Diego at the Charles Darwin Research Station

“Life Is a Game of Turning Energy into Kids”

June 11, 2021

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

One of the simplistic models of obesity relies on the notion of a balance between calories a person consumes in foods and drinks and those burned in physical activity. Some people even go so far as suggesting food labels should tell us how much we’ll have to exercise to burn off the calories in that […]

Read More
Documenting a Dramatic Stillness in the Pandemic

Documenting a Dramatic Stillness in the Pandemic

June 2, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

As life comes back to a new sort of normalcy in some parts of the world, we are slowly coming to terms with the full effects of the pandemic. The deaths have been front and center – 3.5 million to date. Though that number is still growing in many places, it is slowing in others. […]

Read More
Working Submarine Controls

New Study in NEJM: Controlling versus Losing Weight

May 6, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Weight loss is a minor part of obesity care. It’s blindingly obvious, but most people have a tough time wrapping their heads around this basic fact. A new study in the New England Journal of Medicine today tells this story in a very elegant way. It’s all about controlling weight over time. Getting Weight Loss […]

Read More
Walk Along the Banks of the Seine Near Asnieres

More Active, Less Risk for Severe COVID-19?

April 19, 2021

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Does staying active reduce the risk of severe outcomes with COVID-19? A new study suggests this possibility. In fact, the authors of this study found that being inactive was a top risk factor for landing in the hospital or dying from COVID-19. Only advanced age or an organ transplant had higher risks. This makes sense. […]

Read More
HIIT Fit and Strong

HIIT Takes a Hit in an RCT for Certain Heart Patients

February 10, 2021

Scientific Meetings & Publications

High intensity interval training (HIIT) is hot right now. It mixes short periods of very intense exercise with less intense recovery. Even before the pandemic, interest in HIIT had grown dramatically. Then it spiked when pandemic lockdowns began. But a new RCT published yesterday in JAMA suggests that it might not be a panacea for […]

Read More
Teddy Bear with a Mask

COVID-19, Obesity, and Children: From Risk to Reality

February 6, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

For some time now, speculation about the impact of COVID-19 on obesity risk in children has been plentiful. It makes sense. COVID has turned the lives of kids and their parents upside down. On top of that, models suggest childhood obesity rates could go up markedly. However, these were projections and speculation. So we have […]

Read More

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