New Finding: Taxing Unhealthy Products Does Change Behaviour!

Thierry Malleret dives into how one “must-watch” issue for wellness is the way in which governments are increasingly attempting to legislate to limit the consumption of unhealthy products. But the consensus is that taxing products like sugar/soda doesn’t do much to change behaviour.

Well, new evidence from Mexico, where 30 percent of the population is obese (and the average citizen drinks the equivalent of half a litre of Coca-Cola a day), shakes up that “doesn’t-work” established wisdom. Read how much consumption has dropped after new taxes—and for more insight on another “must watch” wellness issue…

What’s on My Mind: Susie Ellis Connects the Dots between Spas and Workplace Wellness

Lately, I have been asked a lot about our focus on workplace wellness.

  • It is the subject of a major research project this year at the Global Wellness Institute (GWI). 
  • We have already had one roundtable in New York on the topic, with another scheduled for September in Miami. 
  • We are having one main stage panel, possibly two, on workplace wellness at our Global Wellness Summit in Mexico City this November. 
  • Various key speakers—including Deepak Chopra, MD, and Nerio Alessandri from Technogym—will incorporate the topic into their remarks. 

Must-Reads from the Wellness World: Week of August 19, 2015

Global Wellness Institute Roundtable on “Redefining Workplace Wellness”

On July 15 the Global Wellness Institute held its seventh roundtable. This time the topic was “Redefining Workplace Wellness,” and the roundtable took place in Manhattan. Twenty-five-plus experts from high-profile organizations (like the Cleveland Clinic, the Clinton Global Initiative, Johnson & Johnson, Citi and Goldman Sachs) sat down for a wide-ranging discussion about how the very idea of “work”—and the profile of the global workforce—is now changing at lightning speed.

Women: Step Away from the Desk and Lower Your Risk of Cancer & Early Mortality

Few medical studies have analyzed the relationship between sitting and total mortality. But a large (123,216 individuals) new study from the American Cancer Society found that women who sit for more than six hours/day were 37 percent more likely to die (over the 13-year study period)—and 10 percent more likely to get cancer—than those who sat less than three hours/day. Surprisingly, the “sitting risk” was lower for men: six-plus-hour-a-day male sitters were 18 percent more likely to die, but the cancer risk was not considerably higher.