New! Sign up for our email newsletter on Substack.

Undereating and Overtreating

A study in the journal Pediatrics given prominence by the AP reports a link between heavy readership of weight-loss articles in teen mags and risky weight-loss practices five years later.

Since the study was based on self-reporting by the subjects, there is no way to determine how accurate it was. But even if there is such a link, the problem isn’t the reading – God knows that young people need to be reading anything they can – it is the behaviors of the girls, their parents, their doctors and the people who stock physicians’ waiting rooms with such magazines.

A related and more dangerous health risk is reported in an essay in the New York Times by three prominent advocates of evidence-based medicine who note that the health care system – and its penchant for “medicalizing” every natural ache, pain and mood – is itself dangerous to our well-being. We are, the authors argue, overscreened, overdiagnosed, overtreated and, ultimately, underserved by a system that makes us use doctors more, not less.

In the case of magazines, it is pretty transparent what is going on – publishers selling ads based on teenagers’ fears. But in the case of disease-mongering, we are blinded by the fact the hucksters have M.D.s and Ph.D.s behind their names.

Fuel Independent Science Reporting: Make a Difference Today

If our reporting has informed or inspired you, please consider making a donation. Every contribution, no matter the size, empowers us to continue delivering accurate, engaging, and trustworthy science and medical news. Independent journalism requires time, effort, and resources—your support ensures we can keep uncovering the stories that matter most to you.

Join us in making knowledge accessible and impactful. Thank you for standing with us!



Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.