
Take a look at this ad and you be the judge...
The ad is part of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta's campaign called Strong4Life. Local experts said that such campaigns might not work and might actually cause more harm than good. Their reasoning is that the imagery might actually encourage the stigma and bullying that obese children face. The organisation though is standing firm because of the startling facts. According to them, if 75% of parents don't even consider their children obese then clearly...
Health Wire|

A weekly round-up of health news stories that grabbed our attention from around the world over the last 7 days: Fast food advertising stronger than parents advice, good cholesterol cuts stroke risk, overweight kids could develop high blood pressure and buy mithai only from FDA approved shops
Health Wire|

A weekly round-up of health news stories that grabbed our attention from around the world over the last 7 days: Magic mushrooms good for the brain, Reebok pays $25 million in customer refunds for false advertising, new diabetes gene found and a new blood test could predict stroke risks...
Health Wire|

A weekly round-up of health news stories that grabbed our attention from around the world over the last 7 days: Global cancer cases in women on the rise, more overweight Indians opting for surgery, early to rise might actually make you healthy, eyelids could warn of heart attack danger and eat more flaxseed...
Health Wire|

A weekly round-up of health news stories that grabbed our attention from around the world over the last 7 days: Pot smokers less likely to be obese, global cases risks increasing, moderate alcohol consumption recommended for women and a man's ring finger gives away his libido information...
Health Wire|

A weekly round-up of health news stories that grabbed our attention from around the world over the last 7 days: Childhood obesity fight needs to go to daycare, fat cells might help hair growth, eating chocolate is good for health and if you can't say as a kid, you won't be able to say no as an adult.
Health Wire|