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Rapid Eating Is Linked to Emotional Eating in Obese Women Relieving from Bariatric Surgery
ConclusionThese data show that rapid eating, by being potentially associated with emotional eating, must be considered as an important issue in bariatric surgery.
Source: Obesity Surgery - September 4, 2017 Category: Surgery Source Type: research

The 7 Countries Anthony Bourdain Has Visited Most
This article originally appeared on FoodandWine.com
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - September 29, 2017 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Max Bonem / Food and Wine Tags: Uncategorized onetime onetimetravel Source Type: news

Once a French Speaker, Always a French Speaker? Bilingual Children's Thinking About the Stability of Language.
Abstract Despite early emerging and impressive linguistic abilities, young children demonstrate ostensibly puzzling beliefs about the nature of language. In some circumstances monolingual children even express the belief that an individual's language is more stable than her race. The present research investigated bilingual children's thinking about the relative stability of language and race (Kinzler & Dautel, 2012). Five-to six-year-old bilingual children were asked to judge whether a target child who varied in race (White or Black) and language (English or French) would grow up to be an adult who maintained ...
Source: Cognitive Science - December 27, 2017 Category: Neuroscience Authors: Dautel JB, Kinzler KD Tags: Cogn Sci Source Type: research

A French update on the Self-Efficacy Measure for Sleep Apnea (SEMSA) to assess continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) use
ConclusionsThe French version of the SEMSA is a psychometrically acceptable self-report questionnaire for measuring health beliefs and behavior in French patients with OSAS treated with CPAP. Such translation and validation should lead to the adoption of validated psychosocial methods for improving CPAP use.
Source: Sleep and Breathing - June 26, 2018 Category: Respiratory Medicine Source Type: research

A French update on the Self-Efficacy Measure for Sleep Apnea (SEMSA) to assess continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) use.
CONCLUSIONS: The French version of the SEMSA is a psychometrically acceptable self-report questionnaire for measuring health beliefs and behavior in French patients with OSAS treated with CPAP. Such translation and validation should lead to the adoption of validated psychosocial methods for improving CPAP use. PMID: 29946945 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Sleep and Breathing - June 26, 2018 Category: Sleep Medicine Authors: Micoulaud-Franchi JA, Coste O, Bioulac S, Guichard K, Monteyrol PJ, Ghorayeb I, Weaver TE, Weibel S, Philip P Tags: Sleep Breath Source Type: research

Development of a new questionnaire to assess the links between children's self-regulation of eating and related parental feeding practices.
Abstract Young children have an innate ability to self-regulate food intake, driven primarily by hunger and satiety cues, but this ability tends to decrease during early childhood. The study aimed to first examine the development and initial validation of a self-report questionnaire suitable for French samples that assess two dimensions of children's self-regulation of eating (eating in the absence of hunger, poor eating compensation abilities) and potential related parental feeding practices. The second aim was to assess the links between children's self-regulation of eating and parental feeding practices as well...
Source: Appetite - March 25, 2019 Category: Nutrition Authors: Monnery-Patris S, Rigal N, Peteuil A, Chabanet C, Issanchou S Tags: Appetite Source Type: research

Inside the Global Quest to Trace the Origins of COVID-19 —and Predict Where It Will Go Next
It wasn’t greed, or curiosity, that made Li Rusheng grab his shotgun and enter Shitou Cave. It was about survival. During Mao-era collectivization of the early 1970s, food was so scarce in the emerald valleys of southwestern China’s Yunnan province that farmers like Li could expect to eat meat only once a year–if they were lucky. So, craving protein, Li and his friends would sneak into the cave to hunt the creatures they could hear squeaking and fluttering inside: bats. Li would creep into the gloom and fire blindly at the vaulted ceiling, picking up any quarry that fell to the ground, while his companion...
Source: TIME: Health - July 23, 2020 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Charlie Campbell/ Yuxi, Yunnan and Alice Park Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 feature Magazine Source Type: news

Refining and optimising a behavioural intervention to support endocrine therapy adherence (ROSETA) in UK women with breast cancer: protocol for a pilot fractional factorial trial
Introduction Women with breast cancer who do not adhere to adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) have increased risks of mortality and recurrence. There are multiple barriers to AET adherence, including medication side-effects, beliefs about medication, memory and psychological distress. We developed four intervention components, each targeting a different barrier. This pilot trial is part of the preparation phase of the Multiphase Optimisation Strategy, and aims to establish key trial parameters, establish intervention component adherence, establish availability and feasibility of outcome and process data, estimate variability...
Source: BMJ Open - February 3, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: Smith, S. G., Green, S. M. C., Ellison, R., Foy, R., Graham, C. D., Mason, E., French, D. P., Hall, L. H., Wilkes, H., McNaught, E., Raine, E., Walwyn, R., Howdon, D., Clark, J., Rousseau, N., Buxton, J., Moore, S. J. L., Parbutt, C., Velikova, G., Farrin Tags: Open access, Oncology Source Type: research

Read Jimmy Kimmel ’s Moving Healthcare Monologue That Everyone’s Talking About
On Tuesday night, Jimmy Kimmel took to his late night show once more to talk healthcare — a subject near and dear to him personally, after his infant son dealt with heart surgery in the days after his birth last May. He delivered a heartfelt monologue then about the importance of adequate health coverage for all Americans, and in the wake of new healthcare legislation from Senators Bill Cassidy and Lindsay Graham, he returned to the subject with an emotional plea. I know you guys are going to find this hard to believe, but a few months ago, after my son had open heart surgery, which was something I spoke about on the...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - September 20, 2017 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Raisa Bruner Tags: Uncategorized Healthcare Jimmy Kimmel Late Night Television Source Type: news

Ren é Girard and the Mimetic Nature of Eating Disorders.
This article explores Girard's ideas on the mimetic nature and origin of eating disorders from a clinical psychiatric perspective and contextualizes them within the field of eating disorders research as well as in relation to broader psychological, sociological and anthropological models of social comparison and non-consumption. Three main themes in Girard's thinking on the topic of eating disorders are identified and explored: the 'end of prohibitions' as a driving force in the emergence of eating disorders, eating disorders as a phenomenon specific to modernity, and the significance of 'conspicuous non-consumption' in th...
Source: Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry - March 7, 2018 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Strand M Tags: Cult Med Psychiatry Source Type: research

Factors influencing physiotherapists' attitudes and beliefs toward chronic low back pain: Impact of a care network belonging.
CONCLUSIONS: Belonging to a LBP care network, which implies closer collaboration with multidisciplinary rehabilitation teams, was the most significant factor associated with higher biopsychosocial beliefs in PTs toward chronic LBP management. PMID: 29521556 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Physiotherapy Theory and Practice - March 9, 2018 Category: Physiotherapy Authors: Petit A, Begue C, Richard I, Roquelaure Y Tags: Physiother Theory Pract Source Type: research

Phthalate Exposure in Pregnant Women: Risk Perception and Preventive Advice of Perinatal Health Professionals
Conclusions for Practice Our sample size was not very large but the findings nevertheless show the lack of knowledge of perinatal health professionals about phthalates. If they are to take on a preventive role, health professionals in France need to be better informed about phthalates and more fully trained in environmental health in general.
Source: Maternal and Child Health Journal - December 17, 2018 Category: Health Management Source Type: research

Exploring beliefs and experiences underlying self-stigma among sex workers in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Abstract Sex workers are among the most stigmatised people globally, with sex workers in Vietnam being no exception. Self-stigma affects sex workers adversely, harming psychological health and acting as a barrier to seeking health care. To inform programmes and interventions to improve well-being, identifying unhelpful or negative core beliefs may provide the basis from which individuals can be supported. With this in mind, this study aimed to gain the perspective of sex workers in Vietnam on the contexts of their working lives. Data were collected in Hanoi. Fourteen semi-structured interviews were conducted with ...
Source: Culture, Health and Sexuality - February 22, 2019 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Huber J, Ferris France N, Nguyen VA, Nguyen HH, Thi Hai Oanh K, Byrne E Tags: Cult Health Sex Source Type: research

Positive attitudes toward weight gain in late pregnancy are associated with healthy eating behaviours.
CONCLUSION: Women with positive attitudes toward weight gain reported healthier eating behaviours in late pregnancy, which remains to be confirmed in prospective studies. Interventions addressing body image issues during pregnancy may positively influence pregnant women's health, including eating behaviours. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III, case-control analytic study. PMID: 33128720 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Eating and weight disorders : EWD - October 31, 2020 Category: Eating Disorders & Weight Management Authors: Savard C, Yan E, Plante AS, Bégin C, Robitaille J, Michaud A, Lemieux S, Provencher V, Morisset AS Tags: Eat Weight Disord Source Type: research

A Year Into the Pandemic, Long COVID Is Still Burdening Patients —and Their Caregivers
When Ghenya Grondin starts rattling off the symptoms she still experiences a year after getting sick with what she believes was COVID-19, she has to pause to consult a list she keeps on her phone for occasions like this one. Exhaustion. Fevers. Headaches. Body aches. Chest pain and shortness of breath. Nausea and gastrointestinal problems. Dry eyes. Brain fog and memory loss—hence her need for a digital list, which goes on and on. While Grondin’s physical symptoms are bad enough to keep her mostly homebound and unable to do her work as a postpartum doula, the constant mental fogginess has hit her hard emotional...
Source: TIME: Health - March 15, 2021 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Jamie Ducharme and Francesca Trianni Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 Source Type: news