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Wandering Adventure Party

memfreeM

memfree@piefed.social

@memfree@piefed.social
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Recent Best Controversial

  • What your snot can reveal about your health
    memfreeM memfree

    Research suggests that how a body reacts to a vaccine is altered by the type of microbiome a person has. Studies on the Covid-19 vaccine, for example, suggest it affected the snot’s microbiome, and in turn, the microbiome affected how efficient the vaccine was.

    I hope those researchers get paid extra.

    The researchers asked 22 adults to shoot themselves up the nose with a syringe full of snot from healthy friends and partners each day for five days. They discovered that symptoms like cough and facial pain, for instance, dropped by almost 40% for up to three months in at least 16 of the patients.

    <shudder> There’s no way those 22 could have been paid enough.

    Uncategorized science

  • Study shows a link between obesity and what’s on local restaurant menus
    memfreeM memfree

    The researchers examined about 222,000 menu items from over 2,000 restaurants in Boston, about 1.6 million menu items from roughly 9,000 restaurants in Dubai, and about 3.1 million menu items from about 18,000 restaurants in London. In Boston, about 71 percent of the items were in the USDA database; in Dubai and London, that figure was 42 percent and 56 percent, respectively.

    So only 3 cities, with London getting the best dataset.

    In Dubai, the researchers did not have the same types of health data available but did observe a strong correlation between rental prices and the nutritional value of neighborhood-level food, suggesting that wealthier residents have better nourishment options.

    This makes a case for “correlation does not mean causation”. The title usues the word “link”, but it sounds like poor neighborhoods have cheap restaurants because that’s what customers can afford, which is just another way of saying there’s a correlation between obesity and low incomes.

    The research moves toward evaluating the complex mix of food available in any given area, which can be true even of areas with more limited options.

    Okay, I appreciate that this is now adding to the data about what food options are available. So even though it sounds like something we already knew, having more proof from a different view is a Good Thing.

    Notice that A is obesity prevalence and F is housing prices, which we’d expect to be opposites. There seems to be correlation with A and C. It would be easier to read all of this if F was reversed to ‘lowest housing rates’ or some such.
    From source paper
    Edit: above image of the London breakdown is from the cited paper which also breaks down the same factors for Boston and Dubai.

    Uncategorized science

  • Papas con fajitas
    memfreeM memfree

    I was trying to say that a fresh meat would have been healthier than a smoked sausage with nitrites and all. You CAN get nitrite-free sausage, but unless you’re looking for that in particular, any given smoked sausage probably has questionable additives.

    Random info:

    • https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/01/bacon-cancer-processed-meats-nitrates-nitrites-sausages
    • https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9654915/
    Uncategorized cooking
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