Prognosis: Losing it
Un pódcast de Bloomberg
251 Episodo
-  Can Enclosed Outdoor Dining Really Be Safe?Publicado: 20/11/2020
-  Can We Make Enough Covid Drugs?Publicado: 18/11/2020
-  Dr. Fauci on What the Vaccine News MeansPublicado: 16/11/2020
-  A Global Virus Report CardPublicado: 13/11/2020
-  Special Edition: The Next Year of the VirusPublicado: 11/11/2020
-  The Cost of Taking Cases to ZeroPublicado: 9/11/2020
-  One College Is Containing CovidPublicado: 6/11/2020
-  Your Questions About the Coming WinterPublicado: 4/11/2020
-  Inside the Push For a Vaccine in the U.S.Publicado: 2/11/2020
-  Fighting the Misinformation CrisisPublicado: 30/10/2020
-  The Obsession With a Vaccine Could Hurt UsPublicado: 28/10/2020
-  An Addictive Trading App Gets a Quarantine BoostPublicado: 26/10/2020
-  The Dangers of Pollution in a PandemicPublicado: 23/10/2020
-  What Herd Immunity Really MeansPublicado: 21/10/2020
-  Europe's Coronavirus Déjà VuPublicado: 19/10/2020
-  What the NBA Bubble Can Teach UsPublicado: 16/10/2020
-  U.S. Vaccine Distribution Strategy is a MessPublicado: 14/10/2020
-  The Virus Dogs Trump's CampaignPublicado: 12/10/2020
-  The Risk to Overweight PeoplePublicado: 9/10/2020
-  Trump's Dream of an Ultra-Fast Vaccine is CrushedPublicado: 7/10/2020
For much of human history, we’ve turned to diets to lose weight and improve our health. But it’s mostly been in vain. No matter how much the number on the scale drops begins to go down, chances are that the weight will come back. That’s just what the science says. But when it comes to weight, the facts just don’t seem to matter. Losing It, a new series from Bloomberg’s Prognosis, looks at how we got weight loss so wrong — and whether there’s a better way forward.
