When the World Health Organization announced their findings about the risk factors of eating red meat, many media outlets ran headlines equating bacon to cigarettes. Red meat, coffee, wine, fish, and other foods and drinks have been the source of stories in the media that have been misleading, vague, and contradictory. For this week’s Please Explain, we are talking all about how the media covers nutrition, and what you need to know when reading health and nutrition reporting, with Anahad O’Connor, health reporter at The New York Times.
Does bacon give you cancer? Up next, please explain is all about nutrition in the headlines. Have a question? Send it our way.
Absolute risk of colon cancer is much lower that people thing https://t.co/c7tYFWmuxJ
"The critical word is 'association'" @anahadoconnor breaks down observational scientific studies https://t.co/c7tYFWmuxJ
"There are studies associating everything we eat with cancer" says @anahadoconnor https://t.co/c7tYFWmuxJ
What's causing obesity? The beverage industry-financed studies says sugary drinks have nothing to do with it.
"I for one always try to eat wild fish" says @anahadoconnor, health reporter for @nytimes https://t.co/c7tYFWmuxJ