Posts Tagged ‘weight loss’

Year
Month
Category
Clear Filters
Trix

Kevin Hall: Common Ground on Ultra-Processed Foods?

April 24, 2019

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

The opening of the Sixth Canadian Obesity Summit was a bit of a homecoming for Kevin Hall. It was his first visit to Ottawa in about three decades and Obesity Canada rewarded him with its Distinguished Lecturer Award. He used the occasion to review the evidence behind the diet wars wars that rage on Twitter. […]

Read More
Smartphone Latte

Does Noom Spell Doom for the Diet Industry?

April 17, 2019

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

Noom is an app and a program that climbed into the top trends for diet and nutrition searches on Google in 2018. So now it’s putting considerable pressure on the old guard of the diet industry at a time when consumers have very mixed feelings about that business. Weight Watchers is now WW – Wellness […]

Read More
Today's Apple

A Doctor’s Advice on Weight: Useful or Not?

March 28, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Exactly how helpful can a primary care provider’s advice on weight be for a person who might be dealing with obesity? The answer is that it depends. Is the doctor offering up generic advice to lose weight? Or are they offering specific, empathetic advice? A new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine tells […]

Read More
Acceptance

Digging into the Lasting Benefits of Acceptance Therapy

March 18, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

A hot catchphrase in popular culture is mindfulness. But for effective, evidence-based obesity care, we need more than buzzy phrases. Thus we have the emergence of acceptance-based therapy (ABT) as a way to enhance well-established techniques for intensive behavioral therapy. New study results in Obesity add to the evidence that acceptance therapy can help deliver […]

Read More
Precision Slicing

On the Hunt for Precision Personalized Diets

March 13, 2019

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

Precision nutrition is a concept with an almost irresistible allure. It borrows on the cachet of precision medicine. On top of that, frustration with the presently imprecise nature of nutrition science makes the promise of precision personalized diets especially appealing. So in pursuit of this idea, a new study in Nutrients offers some tantalizing clues. […]

Read More
Berry Shake

Shaking Diabetes into Remission

March 7, 2019

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Professor Roy Taylor has a passion for shaking diabetes into remission. Two year results are in for the DiRECT trial of an intensive weight management program using meal replacement shakes. The goal is to put type 2 diabetes into remission. The program met the goal in 36 percent of patients after two years. Thus, we […]

Read More
Love (of Technology)

How Hard Can It Be? Write It When You Bite It

February 25, 2019

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

“Is the most effective weight-loss strategy really that hard?” Shucks, no, says the University of Vermont in a press release on a new study in Obesity. All it takes is just 15 minutes per day. “Write it when you bite it.” “Would-be weight-losers can’t muster the willpower to do it,” says this sunny bulletin. Suddenly, […]

Read More
Random

Forgetting to Randomize a Randomized Study

February 10, 2019

Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Sometimes things are not what they seem. That’s a problem when something slips into scientific literature that’s not exactly true. We offer a prime example today. Here we have two papers where an RCT – a randomized controlled study – is not properly randomized. Apparently, the investigators, reviewers, and editors for these papers weren’t too fussy about […]

Read More
The Breakfast

Feasting on the Mythical Magic of Breakfast

February 8, 2019

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

Give us our porridge bowl of steel cut oats. It may be “key to living longer,” the BBC tells us. WebMD reports “an abundance of data” to show a link between skipping breakfast and excess weight. But there’s one teensie problem with that assertion – it simply doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. Better Weight Outcomes from […]

Read More
Pear

An Angry Chef and a Vocal Neuroscientist

January 16, 2019

Consumer Trends, Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity

Diets are out and healthy eating is in. Maybe we’re imagining it, but the deluge of miracle diets typical of January is a little subdued this year. Yes, there’s some buzz about keto diets and intermittent fasting. However, we are also seeing more interest in resisting all the diet hype. Giving voice to the resistance, […]

Read More

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