Posts Tagged ‘scientific integrity’

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Pier Review

Is Reviewer 2 the Source of All Our Woes?

July 7, 2020

Scientific Meetings & Publications

Welcome to the world of peer review. This is the vital tool for bringing you science that you can trust. Legions of earnest experts look over research papers for strengths and weaknesses and overall merit before they appears in press. But urban legend holds that there’s a villain lurking in the process – Reviewer 2. […]

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Sand Castle

Proving an Important Point with a Lousy Study

June 24, 2020

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“In your heart, you know he’s right.” That political tagline was a loser in 1964 and it ranks as one of ten worst of all time. But it’s even worse if such thinking is applied to science. A study seems to prove an important point at a critical moment. So it’s rushed into publication. Then […]

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The Four Elements – Air

Dietary Guidelines 2020: Plenty of Heat, Less Light

June 18, 2020

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

In ordinary times, yesterday’s meeting of the 2020 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee would have been big news. They were supposed to unveil their draft report. But instead, the meeting came and went with a small thud. That’s because everyone has already staked out a position and they’re digging in. Also, it’s fair to say that […]

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COVID-19 Government Truthfulness

Truth, Power, and Misinformation in a Health Crisis

March 27, 2020

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Knowledge is power, said Sir Francis Bacon in the 16th century. But today, that aphorism has morphed. Now it seems that misinformation is quite powerful. Governments and politicians have learned that they can censor information simply by overwhelming truth with noise. However, misinformation in a health crisis can be deadly. Truth and public trust are […]

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Father & Daughter

Fathers and Daughters, Exercise, and Scientific Rigor

December 29, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Can fathers have a significant effect on physical activity in the lives of their daughters? This is an important question. Because right now, girls entering secondary school often don’t have fundamental movement skills that predict lifelong physical activity. Though we have plenty of data to say that fathers more often participate in physical activity with […]

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Collaborating for Analytical Integrity Around the World

December 7, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

  An unexpected privilege comes from sharing information on this site every day. It’s the opportunity for collaborating with really smart people from all over the world. All to promote better science for better health. So today’s post is a simple expression of gratitude to Andrew Brown and every one of his collaborators on our […]

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Soy Milk

Deceiving Consumers About What to Eat and Drink

October 11, 2019

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity

Is there such a thing as righteous deception? If you want to make your head hurt, try to ask yourself that in the context of plant-based food alternatives. Fake meat and fake milk are going mainstream. But the folks who make real meat and real milk don’t like it. Not a bit. They think these […]

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A Carload of Tomatoes

Ten Tools for Exaggeration in Pediatric Obesity Studies

August 21, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Tall tales are not just for the literature of Mark Twain. In fact, you can find a few in childhood obesity. A new paper in Obesity Reviews offers an inventory of ten methods for exaggeration of effectiveness in childhood obesity studies. Andrew Brown and colleagues (including ConscienHealth’s Ted Kyle) provide examples of each. Checklists can […]

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Still Life with Blue Enamel Coffeepot

Fighting Obesity with Coffee and Headlines

June 28, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It’s all so simple. We can fight obesity with a single cup of coffee! It’s a “fat-burning, obesity-fighting beverage.” So say the headlines about a study of brown fat activation with caffeine. This new study in Scientific Reports, hyped by a press release from the University of Nottingham, has unleashed a flood of sensational headlines […]

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Tall Tales

Peer Reviewed Speculation About Labeling Added Sugars

June 3, 2019

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

Disclosing how much added sugar is in a food product is a good idea. Claiming it “will save millions of lives and billions of dollars” is not. Wandering away from the truth never is. But in Circulation last month, Yue Huang et al are bold to say they only have one worry about the precision […]

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