Big Idea: Teach kids about misinformation – Macleans.ca
With the rampant spread of fake news and conspiracy theories, Canadian students would benefit from extra lessons in BS detection.
With the rampant spread of fake news and conspiracy theories, Canadian students would benefit from extra lessons in BS detection.
Government adviser says under-vaccination among pregnant women in particular is putting infants at risk
More and more studies show that alcohol isn’t healthy after all. Dietary guidelines are up for revision in 2025, and already, there’s debate over research…
A new book on youth suicide clusters offers perspective on prevention.
Richard McElreath Director Department of Human Behavior, Ecology, and Culture [link] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology [link] Other researchers are out there writing books…
Even as neoliberalism destroys our dreams of a better life, politicians tell us ‘there is no alternative’. But there is, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot
Debate about the “ultra-processed” concept must not delay food policies that improve health As research into ultra-processed food gains momentum,1 so too does the debate.234…
Applying a positive outlier lens is one effective approach for generating evidence to inform global health policy, program, and funding decisions. Exemplars in Global Health…
The ‘Table 1 Fallacy’ refers to the unsound use of significance testing for comparing the distributions of baseline variables between randomised groups to draw erroneous conclusions…
Its collapse could be sudden and irreversible
Background: Sustainable implementation of new professional services into clinical practice can be difficult. In 2019, a population-wide initiative called SaferM…