Category: Health
-
Cycling Supplements Makes More Sense Than Daily Use
Most supplements weren’t tested for indefinite daily use. Cycling on and off matches biology better than taking the same pills every day for decades.
-
Most People Ignore Early Warning Signs
Health, financial, and relationship warning signs usually appear well before a crisis. The reasons people miss them are predictable — and partially fixable.
-
Placebo effects drive many results
From supplements to surgery, placebo effects explain a startling share of perceived benefits. Here’s how to tell real treatment from expensive expectation.
-
Wellness trends move faster than science
Wellness trends cycle through clinics and feeds long before evidence catches up. Here’s how the gap forms and how to spot trends that will quietly fade.
-
Why recovery drives health more than training
Training breaks you down. Recovery is when you actually adapt. Here’s why sleep, stress, and rest determine fitness outcomes more than your workout plan.
-
The autism diagnostic boom is real and complicated
Autism diagnoses have surged for reasons that are partly clinical, partly social, and partly diagnostic creep. Disentangling the trends matters.
-
More ingredients doesn’t mean better outcomes
Skincare, supplements, and protein powders compete by ingredient count. The clinical evidence shows more compounds rarely produce better results.
-
Fat burner supplements are mostly marketing
Fat burners promise easy weight loss in a capsule. The active ingredients, real-world effects, and clinical data tell a much weaker story.
-
Some injuries are hard to prove
Soft-tissue damage, concussions, and chronic pain often leave no visible trace. Here’s why invisible injuries struggle in courtrooms and clinics alike.