Weight Loss And ...

What the Nutrition Guidelines Still Haven't Caught Up To with Arne Astrup

44 min · 20. Mai 202644 min
Episode What the Nutrition Guidelines Still Haven't Caught Up To with Arne Astrup Cover

Beschreibung

Everyone has been burned by nutrition advice that completely reversed itself a few years later. Eggs were dangerous, then essential. Butter was poison, then practically a health food. Fat was the enemy until we realized what replaced it might have been even worse. If you've ever thrown up your hands and wondered whether nutrition scientists agree on anything, you're not alone. What if the confusion isn't just about changing science but about how nutrition guidelines are made, who influences them, and why the U.S. and Europe keep landing in different places? In this episode, Holly and Jim sit down with one of the world’s most influential nutrition scientists, Dr. Arne Astrup, to pull back the curtain on decades of dietary dogma, trace how some of our biggest nutritional mistakes happened, and explore where the science is actually heading. Dr. Astrup has chaired the Nordic Nutrition Recommendations, led one of Europe's top nutrition research departments, and published over 700 scientific papers. He's also someone who has never been afraid to challenge the consensus, long before it was popular to do so. If you want to understand why nutrition science feels so chaotic, and what you should actually be eating, this conversation is your roadmap. Discussed on the episode: * The surprising historical event that set off decades of misguided dietary advice, and the real culprit that was overlooked * Why the margarine push that replaced butter may have done far more damage than the food it was meant to replace * The simple shift in thinking that makes navigating nutrition less complicated, not more * Why Dr. Astrup says we should stop talking about saturated fat entirely * The counterintuitive truth about full-fat cheese, yogurt, and eggs, and what the latest U.S. dietary guidelines finally got right * A famous olive oil "fact" that will make you question everything you thought you knew about saturated fat * Why the popular ultra-processed food classification may be doing more harm than good, and what a Harvard professor says is the real problem ingredient. * The hidden nutritional crisis quietly unfolding among people on GLP-1 medications * What industry-funded nutrition research actually looks like, compared to publicly funded studies (the answer may surprise you) * Rapid fire: the most misunderstood food in America, the one thing Americans obsess over that barely matters, and the health food Dr. Astrup is most skeptical about

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Episode What the Nutrition Guidelines Still Haven't Caught Up To with Arne Astrup Cover

What the Nutrition Guidelines Still Haven't Caught Up To with Arne Astrup

Everyone has been burned by nutrition advice that completely reversed itself a few years later. Eggs were dangerous, then essential. Butter was poison, then practically a health food. Fat was the enemy until we realized what replaced it might have been even worse. If you've ever thrown up your hands and wondered whether nutrition scientists agree on anything, you're not alone. What if the confusion isn't just about changing science but about how nutrition guidelines are made, who influences them, and why the U.S. and Europe keep landing in different places? In this episode, Holly and Jim sit down with one of the world’s most influential nutrition scientists, Dr. Arne Astrup, to pull back the curtain on decades of dietary dogma, trace how some of our biggest nutritional mistakes happened, and explore where the science is actually heading. Dr. Astrup has chaired the Nordic Nutrition Recommendations, led one of Europe's top nutrition research departments, and published over 700 scientific papers. He's also someone who has never been afraid to challenge the consensus, long before it was popular to do so. If you want to understand why nutrition science feels so chaotic, and what you should actually be eating, this conversation is your roadmap. Discussed on the episode: * The surprising historical event that set off decades of misguided dietary advice, and the real culprit that was overlooked * Why the margarine push that replaced butter may have done far more damage than the food it was meant to replace * The simple shift in thinking that makes navigating nutrition less complicated, not more * Why Dr. Astrup says we should stop talking about saturated fat entirely * The counterintuitive truth about full-fat cheese, yogurt, and eggs, and what the latest U.S. dietary guidelines finally got right * A famous olive oil "fact" that will make you question everything you thought you knew about saturated fat * Why the popular ultra-processed food classification may be doing more harm than good, and what a Harvard professor says is the real problem ingredient. * The hidden nutritional crisis quietly unfolding among people on GLP-1 medications * What industry-funded nutrition research actually looks like, compared to publicly funded studies (the answer may surprise you) * Rapid fire: the most misunderstood food in America, the one thing Americans obsess over that barely matters, and the health food Dr. Astrup is most skeptical about

20. Mai 202644 min
Episode It Worked for Them. Will It Work for You? How to Actually Use Anecdotes Cover

It Worked for Them. Will It Work for You? How to Actually Use Anecdotes

You've heard it before. A friend, a coworker, or your own mother swears by something, and the proof is standing right in front of you. She lost 30 pounds. You've seen it. You know it's real. So why aren't you doing it too? Here's the thing: personal success stories are powerful precisely because they're real. But real doesn't mean the whole picture. And in the world of weight loss, acting on the wrong part of a true story can quietly pull you off track, not because you were fooled, but because no one told you what was missing. In this episode, Holly and Jim break down the science of why anecdotes feel so convincing, and give you a practical framework for turning "my friend lost 30 pounds doing this" into something you can actually use  without falling into the traps that catch almost everyone. Discussed on the episode: * The six ways a real, true story can still mislead you, and the scientific terms that explain exactly why * Why the people who didn't get results are almost never the ones you hear from * The surprising reason your friend may have lost weight on keto that had nothing to do with keto * What apple cider vinegar actually does (and doesn't do) for weight loss * The questions Holly always asks when a patient walks in, swearing by something new * How to respond when someone you trust is completely convinced that something worked without damaging the relationship * When you should sit up and pay attention to an anecdote, and when to be suspicious * The one red flag that should always make you pause before trying something new

13. Mai 202637 min
Episode How Regular Exercise Positively Influences Depression Cover

How Regular Exercise Positively Influences Depression

Exercise is good for you. But good for your mood? Your brain? Science has now weighed in, and the answer might surprise you more than you'd expect. Join Holly and Jim as they dig into the most comprehensive review ever conducted on exercise and depression, a sweeping 2026 Cochrane analysis of 73 randomized controlled trials and nearly 5,000 people. This isn't feel-good advice; it's hard data. Discover why taking action through movement can benefit your mental health, no matter your role or experience, and why it's time to prioritize exercise for your mind. Along the way, Holly and Jim go beyond the science to tackle the real challenge: knowing exercise helps is one thing, but actually doing it when you're at your lowest is another. They share practical, compassionate strategies for getting off the couch  even when depression is telling you not to. Discussed on the episode: * How exercise stacks up against antidepressants (the results will raise your eyebrows) * Why "moderate" is actually a powerful word when it comes to science * The reason you can't just tell a depressed person to "go for a walk" and what to say instead * Why you should need a doctor's note not to exercise * The surprising truth about whether more intense exercise is actually better for your mood * Holly's "10-minute rule" - a simple trick for when you truly cannot get off the couch * What does it mean if you feel like you "need" exercise to feel okay * The one thing Jim wishes every doctor would bring up when treating depression Resources & Links Mentioned: * Cochrane Review (2026) on exercise and depression [https://www.cochrane.org/evidence/CD004366_exercise-effective-treating-depression]

6. Mai 202639 min
Episode Ten Things Lean People Assume About Weight Loss Cover

Ten Things Lean People Assume About Weight Loss

Have you ever wondered why the same advice that worked perfectly for your friend did absolutely nothing for you? What if the problem isn't your effort, your commitment, or even the advice itself, but rather the body you're living in? Holly and Jim tackle one of the most misunderstood topics in weight management: the gap between what feels obviously true and what's actually universal. If you've never struggled with your weight, some things just seem like common sense. However, for millions of people, this "common sense" doesn't align with their lived experience, and there's a biological reason why. This episode represents a significant shift in perspective that could alter the way you perceive yourself, your struggles, and the people around you. Whether you've battled your weight your whole life or you've never given it much thought, this conversation will challenge what you think you know  and open the door to something far more useful than judgment. Discussed on the episode: * The one word that explains why weight loss advice works for some people and completely fails others * Why "just eat less and move more" is technically correct and almost entirely unhelpful. * What a yogurt and an old medication taught Holly about how different bodies really are * The concept of "food noise" and why some people can't even imagine what it feels like * Why the number on the scale might be the worst goal you can set * What the new generation of GLP-1 medications is revealing about biology that we couldn't see before * How your metabolism is like a thumbprint and what that means for your weight loss strategy * The uncomfortable truth about why well-meaning advice from lean people often misses the mark

29. Apr. 202647 min
Episode Exercise Isn't What You Think It Is Anymore with Renee Rogers Cover

Exercise Isn't What You Think It Is Anymore with Renee Rogers

For decades, the message has been simple: if you want to lose weight, you need to exercise more. But what happens when a medication can do the heavy lifting for you? GLP-1 drugs are reshaping everything we thought we knew about weight loss, and that means the role of exercise is changing, too. Not disappearing. Changing. Join Holly and Jim as they sit down with Dr. Renee Rogers, senior scientist at the University of Kansas Medical Center and expert in biobehavioral lifestyle interventions, to explore this new frontier. If you've ever struggled to stick with exercise, felt guilty for not doing enough, or wondered whether movement even matters now that medications like Ozempic and Wegovy exist, this conversation was made for you. The answer isn't what you'd expect. Exercise isn't less important in the age of GLP-1s. It's more important just for entirely different reasons. Discussed on the episode: * The one word that could completely transform your relationship with exercise * Why losing muscle during weight loss isn't always the crisis people think it is (but also why you shouldn't ignore it) * The surprising link between fatigue on GLP-1 medications and physical activity levels * Why cardio vs. strength training is the wrong question to ask (and what to ask instead) * The exercise myth Dr. Rogers would delete from the internet forever * How the timing of your GLP-1 dose might affect when you should work out * What to focus on after you've hit your goal weight

22. Apr. 202647 min