Posts Tagged ‘research’

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Urban Installation, Grievances

Registering a Grievance About Grievance Studies

October 5, 2018

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Who are they to judge? Overcoming anthropometry through fat bodybuilding. The journal Fat Studies published and has now retracted that hoax study. But this was not a one-off hoax. It was part of a series, concocted to make a point. Academic grievance studies are corrupting scholarship, say Helen Pluckrose, James A. Lindsay, and Peter Boghossian. Harvard lecturer Yascha Mounk […]

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One to Watch: Precision Medicine for Obesity

September 30, 2018

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

If you want to understand where the future lies in obesity medicine, Aaron Kelly suggests you look closely at precision medicine. At the fall summit of the Obesity Medicine Association yesterday, Kelly offered a tantalizing overview of this approach. But for now, he cautioned, clinicians have to fall back on a more pragmatic approach. In […]

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Thinkin Dunkin

Dunkin’ Thinkin’ in the News

September 27, 2018

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Honors for the best nutrition news fable of the week goes to Fox News. That’s because intrepid reporter Meredith Lepore made magic from a dense review article on energy requirements for cognitive work. From that humble starting material, she conjured up some great clickbait. Don’t think twice about grabbing an extra donut, she says. So […]

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Brian Wansink

What Happens When PR Overtakes Science?

September 23, 2018

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

Brian Wansink has a gift for conceiving research into eating behavior that has long been “catnip for the media.” Now, after a year of contesting accusations of misconduct, he’s resigned from Cornell University. Last week, JAMA retracted six of his papers in a single day. According to Retraction Watch, that makes a total of 13 […]

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Saint Sophia the Almighty Wisdom

Shouldn’t Nutrition Education Control Obesity?

September 18, 2018

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

Knowledge is power, right? So why doesn’t nutrition education – by itself – resolve our problems with obesity? Maybe we just haven’t tried hard enough. Or maybe knowledge is helpful. But it’s insufficient for overcoming obesity. Just like any other disease. A test of health promotion for Turkish children with obesity provides an good case study. […]

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Pecorino from Vincenzo

Now Can AHA Stop Hating Dairy Fat?

September 12, 2018

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

The wheels of  nutritionism grind slow. Yet another study – this one published yesterday in Lancet – suggests we shouldn’t fear dairy fat so much. But the American Heart Association and other true believers in the dangers of saturated fat show no signs of budging. AHA persists in recommending only fat-free or low-fat dairy. Another Large Observational Study […]

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Taking Direct Action

National Obesity Care Week: 5 Reasons to Take Action

September 7, 2018

We’re just one month away from National Obesity Care Week. It’s October 7-16 this year. But now is the time to make your plans and pledge to take action. Here’s why. 1. Weight Bias Is Blocking Progress Weight stigma starts early and hits hard. It has devastating effects on health and quality of life at […]

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Brain Maps of Associations Between BMI and Cortical Thickness, figure from Vainik et al

Inheriting Brains, Behaviors, and BMI

September 3, 2018

Obesity is a condition that we largely inherit. But that’s a tough concept for some folks to accept. Even the AHA misclassifies BMI as a “health behavior” – a mistake we keep hoping it will correct. Meanwhile, contrary evidence keeps coming. Brains, behaviors, and BMI are heritable and related. Neurologic and Behavioral Dimensions of Obesity For […]

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Big Cabbage

Big, Bad, and Unfortunate Mistakes

September 2, 2018

The bigs are out to get us. Really. Big food, big government, big agriculture, big medicine, big marketing, big academia, and more. We could go on, but no need. When all these bigs align, some big, bad, and unfortunate mistakes can fall out. A self-professed angry old man – George Lundberg – outlines a case study in […]

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English Channel from the International Space Station

Can You Spot Obesity from Outer Space?

September 1, 2018

Yes, you can spot neighborhoods with high obesity rates from outer space. But it’s not about the people you can see. It’s about the physical features of neighborhoods that provide clues about where obesity lives. A new paper in JAMA Network Open explains. Spotting Features That Predict More Obesity Adyasha Maharana and Elaine Okanyene Nsoesie […]

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