Posts Tagged ‘sugar’

Year
Month
Category
Clear Filters
Thomas Sergeant Perry Reading a Newspaper

Headlines vs Science on Obesity and Nutrition at OW2018

November 15, 2018

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

It’s a recurring frustration. Science is a difficult process of stepwise efforts to uncover the truth. We never get it all at once. And then – especially when the subject is obesity and nutrition – a battle of headlines vs science emerges. Yesterday, this frustration was on vivid display in a packed lecture hall at ObesityWeek. On […]

Read More
Read the Recipe

Zeroing In on the Fine Print for Added Sugars

November 9, 2018

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Food Industry

At ObesityWeek in Nashville next week, it will be easy to miss some gold nuggets of insight. Because so much is there, all at once. But a session you should truly not miss is The Scoop on Food Labeling from Inside the Industry. Why? It’s especially timely. The fine print for added sugars is finally […]

Read More
Mound of Butter

Big Butter Bias Bites the BMJ

October 28, 2018

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

Has a big butter bias bitten the BMJ on the backside? Roughly 180 academics from all over the world have signed an open letter to the BMJ. They’re asking for better editorial rigor at one of the BMJ journals – The British Journal of Sports Medicine. What prompted this? A series of articles seeming to promote a pro-butter […]

Read More
The Lone Ranger

The Perfectly Natural Bias for a White Hat

October 15, 2018

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

Never underestimate the power of rationalization. Because sounds good, very often, is good enough. Just ask folks selling “natural” foods and drinks. A good story about natural purity fetches premium prices. Also, you should look at new research on white hat bias. Even for researchers, it seems the ends can justify the means. It’s a […]

Read More
Grazing

Which Matters Most: Calories, Carbs, or Consumption Patterns?

October 4, 2018

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

It’s a familiar debate. Is energy balance governed by physiology, thermodynamics, and calories? Or does dietary quality – perhaps an excess of refined carbs – tell you more? It’s possible that this tired debate is missing an important point. Recent research suggests that consumption patterns might be at least equally important. When you eat and […]

Read More
Black Angus Baguette

Quoi?! More Burgers Than Baguettes in France?

October 2, 2018

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

France has one of the lowest obesity rates in the world. But it’s growing and the French parliament knows why. Le Big Mac. Burgers outsold baguettes for the first time ever in 2017. Burgers are on the menus in 85 percent of French restaurants. They sold 1.5 billion of them last year. So naturally, when the parliament […]

Read More
Advice to a Young Artist

Which Bad Dietary Advice Caused Obesity to Grow?

September 16, 2018

Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Health Policy

Perhaps the backlash against decades of faulty low-fat dietary guidelines is peaking. It’s now popular to suggest that bad dietary advice in the 1980s sparked the epidemic of obesity that’s still booming today. But like so many other glib proclamations on the subject, this one is probably wrong. Or at the very least, it glosses […]

Read More
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 […]

Read More
Disconnected

Loose Connections Between Dietary Guidelines and Reality

August 16, 2018

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

By their very nature, dietary guidelines have a shaky relationship with the reality of what we eat. Before 1977, Americans had no guidelines for what they should eat. But then, a senate select committee published dietary goals for Americans. In 1980, those “goals” became the first edition of  Dietary Guidelines for Americans Controversial from the […]

Read More
Morning in San Cristóbal de las Casas

Cures for Obesity and NCDs from a Perch of Privilege

July 19, 2018

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

A jarring story is playing out in public health. Momentum is growing to tax sugary drinks and junk foods all over the world. From a perch of privilege it sounds good. If you tax these bad foods and drinks enough, people will stop buying them. Even better, modeling exercises tell advocates that the benefits will […]

Read More

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