Our best bet for healthy aging is to escape the flawed health care system. It makes disease treatment more profitable than prevention. It neglects aging as a treatable cause of diseases. And it denies access to personalized lifestyle medicine. This blog is about how you can overcome these limitations. It is about challenging half-truths and outdated ideas. It is focused on evidence-based, personalized lifestyle medicine for lifelong health. Delivered by a feisty public health scientist.
Friday, May 18, 2012
How to survive the health care system.
Labels:
bextra,
big pharma,
hdl levels,
health,
heart disease,
increase hdl,
life,
Merck,
oseltamivir,
Pfizer,
pharmaceutical,
risk score,
Roche,
tamiflu,
torcetrapib,
what ldl cholesterol
Location:
Baden-Baden, Deutschland
Monday, May 14, 2012
Why your heart attack may just be collateral damage in big pharma's turf wars.
When a pharmaceutical company tells you that its drug is
safer than it really is, it probably plays with your health. And possibly with
your life. That's not a very nice thing to do. But it's also very profitable. Which
is why it happens more often that you care to know.
Labels:
Actos,
Avandia,
Cleveland clinics,
diabetes,
Finance,
GlaxoSmithKline,
health,
heart attack,
life,
Nissen,
Pioglitazone,
Rosiglitazone,
Senate Committee,
Takeda
Location:
Baden-Baden, Deutschland
Thursday, May 10, 2012
The one way to make you slim, fit and healthy?
That your fattening lifestyle drives health insurance costs up is nothing but a fat lie. That much I have told you in
the previous post. With Marlboro Man and Ronald McDonald doing better for your
health insurer's balance sheet than Healthy Living, you might think that public
health should look beyond economics as an argument for health. In this post I will tell you why they
shouldn't.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Who says being fat is bad?
Would you have guessed that, one fine day, health insurers
will regret the demise of big tobacco and its contribution to health care
costs? Would you have guessed that, when that day arrives, health insurers
would also learn to love other frowned-upon-vices of their policy holders, such
as getting fat and lazy? Your answer is probably "no, I wouldn't have
guessed that in my dreams.".
Labels:
chronic disease,
costs,
health,
health care,
obesity,
overweight,
prevention,
smoking
Location:
Baden-Baden, Deutschland
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Pass me the salt. And shut up about stroke risk.
That's a bad rep for a science, which has no other
aspiration than that of making sense from data, of discovering an association
between salt intake and stroke, of proving that the former causes the latter. Statistics
is above lies. Those who interpret it are not.
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