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  #1   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 07:30
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is online now
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Plan: P:E/DDF
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Default NuSI: Nutrition Science Initiative

Today is the official launch date of NuSI

http://nusi.org

Their mission:

The Nutrition Science Initiative is a nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing the economic and social burden of obesity and obsesity-related chronic disease by improving the quality of science in nutrition and obesity research.


It may be helpful to place any media attention, reviews, blogs and comments on one thread.

Last edited by JEY100 : Thu, Sep-13-12 at 03:24.
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  #2   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 08:48
wheeler's Avatar
wheeler wheeler is offline
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I remember hearing about this a few months ago. I just checked out the website and joined. Yeah! Looks to be another great resource and a good place to direct people when they ask about my weight loss.
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  #3   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 12:11
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is online now
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Plan: P:E/DDF
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Press release:
http://www.wkrn.com/story/19522620/...ttype=printable


The Nutrition Science Initiative Seeks to Definitively Answer the Question: What Should We Eat to be Healthy?

SAN DIEGO, Sept. 12, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In response to the skyrocketing prevalence of obesity and diabetes in the United States today and the estimated $150 billion in related healthcare expenditures, a consortium of respected clinicians and scientists from the fields of endocrinology, metabolism, diabetes, obesity, and nutrition, today launch a new nonprofit organization to finally, and with scientific certainty, answer the question: "What should we eat to be healthy?"

The Nutrition Science Initiative (NuSI) is dedicated to dramatically reducing the economic and social burden of obesity and obesity-related diseases by significantly improving nutrition science. NuSI seeks to unambiguously clarify the relationship between diet and obesity and its related diseases as a result of a growing acceptance that nutrition science is – and historically has been – significantly substandard as compared to other scientific disciplines such as chemistry, biology, or physics.

"The question of the right diet has seemingly been settled in the public for years, yet obesity rates continue to rise. This contradiction begs the question: Do we really have good science to support our dietary recommendations? The answer is convincingly no," says Kevin Schulman, M.D., Professor of Medicine and Business Administration and Director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute and the Center for Clinical and Genetic Economics at Duke University. "The largest public health crisis in the United States is being addressed with the type of data that we reject in every other field of medicine: observational studies subject to selection bias and small scale, short-term clinical studies which can't offer definitive results."

Born from a shared vision of its co-founders, Peter Attia, M.D. and Gary Taubes, NuSI will fund research that applies first-of-its-kind, rigorous scientific experimentation to the field of nutrition and will communicate its findings to the public and decision-makers alike in an effort to significantly improve the quality of nutritional guidance, dietary recommendations, and policies.

"Diet has profound importance for human health," said NuSI co-founder Gary Taubes. "NuSI will catalyze a revolution in nutrition science by challenging both the conventional wisdom that obesity is caused simply by eating too many calories and the alternative hypothesis that obesity is caused less by the actual number of calories consumed and more by the type of calories consumed. We see an effective way to address the problem, and the solution is within our reach."

In order to conduct scientifically-sound experiments, NuSI's oversight comes from independent researchers from varying backgrounds and divergent beliefs. The combination of skeptical experts holding opposing theories, coupled with the shared belief that nutrition science in its current state is inadequate, demands that the findings will be based on rigorous science rather than popular opinion.

"Scientific paradigm shifts occur only when standard dogmas are questioned and tested," said David Harlan, M.D., William and Doris Krupp Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Diabetes Division at the University of Massachusetts School of Medicine. "NuSI is an example of a group of committed scientists, clinicians, and citizens interested in rigorously testing how dietary constituents can influence body weight, and the mechanisms underlying those effects. NuSI will play an extraordinarily important role in science, since the standard systems have become dominated by those who - consciously or subconsciously - resist studies that fall outside the accepted dogma."

NuSI will operate entirely on funding from private citizens and other organizations. A two-year, multi-million-dollar seed funding commitment was provided by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF).

"Laura and John Arnold are passionate about reducing the social and economic burden of obesity," said LJAF Director of Communications, Meredith Johnson. "Yet, without defensible scientific evidence, it is useless to support any public education campaign around what to eat. We are committed to supporting innovative efforts, like NuSI, that promote the rigorous science necessary to drive lasting and positive social impact."

By facilitating reliable science to inform dietary guidelines, NuSI seeks, by the year 2025, to see a reduction in the prevalence of obesity in the United States from 35 percent to 15 percent and a reduction in the prevalence of diabetes from 8 percent to 2 percent. If successful, the resulting impact on healthcare spending in the United States could be reduced from today's nearly 18 percent of GDP to less than 10 percent.

"NuSI is looking to concentrate all nutrition science funding efforts into one common and strategic path to resolution, rather than individual efforts that don't build to a greater scientific understanding," said NuSI's President and co-founder, Peter Attia, M.D. "Without all the elements – money, time and talent – working in concert, research efforts will continue to fall short of what is necessary to solve this problem. Our greatest asset is our dedication to solving a fundamentally solvable problem using a multi-disciplinary and focused approach. NuSI will be successful because we are bringing together the best scientific minds and giving them the time and resources they require to find the answers we all need."

Last edited by JEY100 : Thu, Sep-13-12 at 03:26.
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  #4   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 12:17
Nancy LC's Avatar
Nancy LC Nancy LC is offline
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Awesome! Looking forward to reading loads. Hope they keep it updated.

I donated, too.

Last edited by Nancy LC : Wed, Sep-12-12 at 12:25.
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  #5   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 13:16
Nancy LC's Avatar
Nancy LC Nancy LC is offline
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Plan: DDF
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Oooh, I send them a note:

Quote:
Hi Nancy,

Thank you for the suggestion, we just added the google+ feature and anticipate a more elaborate social network interface in the months ahead.

Yes, we will have a blog up shortly!

Thank you again for your commitment.

Thank you,
The NuSI team

They're not only in my town but their building is on a street where I used to work.
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  #6   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 13:53
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is online now
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Plan: P:E/DDF
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Well Nancy, they still have three job openings listed on their website.

There is a newsletter sign-up for updates.

The list of studies under the research section is huge, but I wish they had linked each original source. It might be that many are in journals with membership requirements, but just having them all in one place is so helpful.
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  #7   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 13:57
RawNut's Avatar
RawNut RawNut is offline
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Nancy for NuSI!
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  #8   ^
Old Wed, Sep-12-12, 14:01
Nancy LC's Avatar
Nancy LC Nancy LC is offline
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Plan: DDF
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I would go for it if I wasn't so happy in my current job.
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  #9   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 03:19
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Karhys Karhys is offline
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Plan: Primal-ish
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I'm so excited about NuSI! Since its the 'baby' of Gary Taubes and Peter Attia, who are both incredibly driven and capable people, I have high hopes.

This is Peter Attia's blog post announcing it:
http://eatingacademy.com/nutrition/...hard-feynman-do

And this is Gary Taubes' blog post:
http://garytaubes.com/2012/09/the-l...nce-initiative/
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  #10   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 03:32
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is online now
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Plan: P:E/DDF
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Default A Manhattan Project To End The Obesity Epidemic

http://www.forbes.com/sites/larryhu...esity-epidemic/


Forbes Magazine titles their coverage:
A Manhattan Project To End The Obesity Epidemic

Quote:
A newly launched nonprofit organization, the Nutrition Science Initiative, will try to find an answer to the question, “What should we eat to be healthy?” NuSI is nothing if not ambitious: its goal is to seek “the end of fad diets and high obesity rates.”

The founders of the organization, called NuSI (pronounced “new see”) for short, are Gary Taubes and Peter Attia. Taubes is the science journalist who helped launch the low-carb diet resurgence with his controversial New York Times magazine articles and subsequent books, Good Calories, Bad Calories and Why We Get Fat. Attia, who is the President of NuSI, trained in surgery at Johns Hopkins and the NIH before working as a consultant at McKinsey & Company.

Taubes explains the premise of NuSI:

NuSI was founded on the premise that the reason we are beset today by epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes, and the reason physicians and researchers think these diseases are so recalcitrant to dietary therapies, is because of our flawed understanding of their causes. We believe that with a concerted effort and the best possible science, this problem can be fixed.

NuSI originally started as a more modest endeavor, but has now received a significant commitment of financial support from a foundation started by billionaire hedge fund manager John Arnold. The aim of the organization is, as the following NuSI publicity slide states, to “create a Manhattan Project-like effort to solve” the problem of obesity in the US:



The NuSI scientific advisory board is composed of Alan Sniderman, a lipid researcher at McGill University, David Harlan, the former head of the Diabetes, Endocrinology, & Metabolic Diseases branch of the NIDDK and now at U Mass, Mitchel Lazar, of the University of Pennsylvania, and Kevin Schulman, of Duke University.

On his Weighty Matters blog, obesity clinician and writer Yoni Freehoff offers a perspective both critical and supportive of the NuSI agenda.
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  #11   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 03:40
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is online now
Posts: 13,561
 
Plan: P:E/DDF
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Default Stephan Guyenet supports NuSI

Interesting post by Stephan Guyenet about Nusi:

http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.c...ative-nusi.html Full text here, but quote in part:

Quote:
Why I Support NuSI

Dr. Attia and Taubes have asked for my support on this project. As everyone reading this knows, I've had high-profile disagreements with Taubes. Dr. Attia and I have had a few positive exchanges, and although I don't know him well, he strikes me as a reasonable and constructive person. Both of them are proponents of the low-carbohydrate diet, and they have both had personal successes with this eating style. Dr. Attia also has clinical experience with diet, including but not limited to low-carbohydrate diets.

NuSI is proposing major funding for some very ambitious experiments that have never been conducted before. I'll let Dr. Attia give more details on this, but suffice it to say that the project could be very exciting if it materializes as planned.


So the question arises, should I support an organization that's run in part by a person whose approach to scientific inquiry I disagree with? It would be remiss of me not to question the wisdom of putting a major science funding mechanism into the hands of a journalist who is, shall we say, very attached to his ideas. To put my conscience to rest, I contacted Dr. Kevin Hall, an obesity researcher who is acting as lead scientist on this initiative. He explained to me that NuSI will have no control over research design, conduct, or reporting, and in fact he's contractually obligated to the National Institutes of Health not to allow NuSI to have any control over these things. So although NuSI will get to choose what experiments it funds, it has no control over what happens after that, and so its potential to compromise research integrity seems low.

I may not always agree with NuSI's funding priorities (although I suspect I often will), but the bottom line is that it will increase funding for top scientists in a tough economic/political climate, potentially make experiments possible that were formerly inaccessible due to excessive cost, and add to human knowledge about diet and health. That's why I support it.
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  #12   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 04:21
Starlight! Starlight! is offline
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Guyenet sounds bitter to me. It does him no credit that he just had to throw in that gibe questioning Taubes' integrity.
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  #13   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 05:22
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sexym2 sexym2 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Starlight!
Guyenet sounds bitter to me. It does him no credit that he just had to throw in that gibe questioning Taubes' integrity.

Bitter because he's concerned theirs something better than his own ideas?
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  #14   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 06:46
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LilyB LilyB is offline
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Plan: Atkins- leaning Paleo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Starlight!
Guyenet sounds bitter to me. It does him no credit that he just had to throw in that gibe questioning Taubes' integrity.

It's hard to "forgive" an "uncredentialed" guy who kicks your ~ss in your field of choice...
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  #15   ^
Old Thu, Sep-13-12, 07:17
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becky7474 becky7474 is offline
Looking 4 Onederland
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Plan: Atkins '72, IF
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Thanks for all the links. I need to subscribe to this.
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