Dr. Marty Makary
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I didn't realize how many schools feed breakfast to children. Donuts, cupcakes, ding-dongs, French toast, as if it alludes to the French healthy living.
I didn't realize how many schools feed breakfast to children. Donuts, cupcakes, ding-dongs, French toast, as if it alludes to the French healthy living.
I didn't realize how many schools feed breakfast to children. Donuts, cupcakes, ding-dongs, French toast, as if it alludes to the French healthy living.
Right, more sophisticated, right. So this is where the entire medical establishment can pivot and focus on. And you're going to see grants coming out of the NIH. We're working in coordination with the NIH to make sure there's research in this area. You know, the NIH has really... focused on genetics.
Right, more sophisticated, right. So this is where the entire medical establishment can pivot and focus on. And you're going to see grants coming out of the NIH. We're working in coordination with the NIH to make sure there's research in this area. You know, the NIH has really... focused on genetics.
Right, more sophisticated, right. So this is where the entire medical establishment can pivot and focus on. And you're going to see grants coming out of the NIH. We're working in coordination with the NIH to make sure there's research in this area. You know, the NIH has really... focused on genetics.
And the entire culture of the NIH and thus the entire academic medical community in the United States has been a culture focused on the genome. Based on the Francis Collins era that the gene is responsible for most of our health problems and the gene can solve most of our health problems. And you look at the NIH individual institutes within the National Institutes of Health
And the entire culture of the NIH and thus the entire academic medical community in the United States has been a culture focused on the genome. Based on the Francis Collins era that the gene is responsible for most of our health problems and the gene can solve most of our health problems. And you look at the NIH individual institutes within the National Institutes of Health
And the entire culture of the NIH and thus the entire academic medical community in the United States has been a culture focused on the genome. Based on the Francis Collins era that the gene is responsible for most of our health problems and the gene can solve most of our health problems. And you look at the NIH individual institutes within the National Institutes of Health
And it's geneticists all over the place. You look at the Institute for Child Health, at the NIH. And it's run by a geneticist who parades around finding a gene involved in some ultra-rare gene disorder. That's good and it's important, but nobody is talking about the food our kids are eating.
And it's geneticists all over the place. You look at the Institute for Child Health, at the NIH. And it's run by a geneticist who parades around finding a gene involved in some ultra-rare gene disorder. That's good and it's important, but nobody is talking about the food our kids are eating.
And it's geneticists all over the place. You look at the Institute for Child Health, at the NIH. And it's run by a geneticist who parades around finding a gene involved in some ultra-rare gene disorder. That's good and it's important, but nobody is talking about the food our kids are eating.
The genes are not the cause of our chronic disease epidemic. It's what we're doing or what is being done to children by adults today, unknowingly, with good intentions sometimes. you go to the National Institute of Environmental Health at the NIH. Go to the website, and you'll see the director has on there that they were involved in identifying a gene that may be associated with obesity.
The genes are not the cause of our chronic disease epidemic. It's what we're doing or what is being done to children by adults today, unknowingly, with good intentions sometimes. you go to the National Institute of Environmental Health at the NIH. Go to the website, and you'll see the director has on there that they were involved in identifying a gene that may be associated with obesity.
The genes are not the cause of our chronic disease epidemic. It's what we're doing or what is being done to children by adults today, unknowingly, with good intentions sometimes. you go to the National Institute of Environmental Health at the NIH. Go to the website, and you'll see the director has on there that they were involved in identifying a gene that may be associated with obesity.
What are you doing? I mean, there's value in that research. How about the ding-dongs and cupcakes and donuts and French toast that the kids are eating with government tax dollars every morning at school and nobody seems to be paying attention?
What are you doing? I mean, there's value in that research. How about the ding-dongs and cupcakes and donuts and French toast that the kids are eating with government tax dollars every morning at school and nobody seems to be paying attention?
What are you doing? I mean, there's value in that research. How about the ding-dongs and cupcakes and donuts and French toast that the kids are eating with government tax dollars every morning at school and nobody seems to be paying attention?
As a surgeon, I've had patients that would do everything to lose weight. They did all the right things. They switched to better foods and they would exercise. They couldn't lose weight. What was happening there? Can we learn from those individual patients? Maybe the microbiome was altered in a way that is not easy to fix by just switching back.
As a surgeon, I've had patients that would do everything to lose weight. They did all the right things. They switched to better foods and they would exercise. They couldn't lose weight. What was happening there? Can we learn from those individual patients? Maybe the microbiome was altered in a way that is not easy to fix by just switching back.