Friday, 13 February 2026

A Valentine's Day ❤️ reminder for physicians and your care teams

 
 
Dear CMT Physician Reader & Practice Care Team,
 
Depending on when (or if) you're celebrating Valentine's Day (Fri or Sat of this year) it's that time of year again when our team sends you this one simple reminder ❤️⏰:
 
"Yes. Despite your hectic schedule and patient volume, you're allowed to have a life."
 
And, if this email catches you still finishing charts at 4:47 p.m. today… this note is especially FOR You!
 
We all know your medical practice today runs on dedication (and likely a steady rotation of coffee ☕🧋and tea). But it shouldn't run on exhaustion. The idea of leaving on time to spend an evening with your family or friends or simply to recharge shouldn't create inner-anxiety, guilt, or a sense that you're somehow falling behind.
 
In fact, it does the opposite. It refuels you! ⛽
 
In concierge medicine — and in any practice actually — leaving on time isn't just a personal act. It's a leadership move! When physician leaders model this type of schedule management, teams feel it. When teams feel it, patients benefit too!
 
So this Valentine's Day, consider this your friendly annual nudge from our office to yours: Set that alarm or reminder (or three if you're like me!). ⏰ Wrap up that email and walk out on time!
 
And, if anyone tells you otherwise, remember: leaving on time isn't selfish. It's necessary for a sustainable practice model in this space. And it may be one of the most evidence-based decisions you make all year. 😊 In fact, we wrote an entire article for you as well about this – with citations and sources to help. Here's the entire article — it's a short read and includes a few additional helpful tips and a little evidence you may find useful in your practice today. And hopefully, you'll give yourself today a gift… permission to go home on time. ❤️
 
 
P.S. 
We're also tipping our hats to the physician spouses and partners quietly supporting your calling behind the scenes — they are the people who keep your life steady while medicine keeps you moving (and probably who have reheated dinner 🍽️ more times FOR YOU than they can count 😊).
 
Now, go enjoy your time off!
 
FOR Doctors. FOR You. FOR Real Life.
Michael
Editor-in-Chief
Concierge Medicine Today
 
Educational and informational only — not medical, legal, or professional advice. But strongly recommended if you'd like to stay married, rested, and invited back for future Valentine's dinners. 😊
 
 
4080 McGinnis Ferry Road, Bldg 800, Ste 801
Alpharetta, GA 30005, USA
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Latest from Food Politics: Weekend reading: The alcohol-free trend: it's hot!

I subscribe to Beverage Daily,  an industry publication, to learn about current trends I might otherwise miss. I hadn’t been paying much attention to the alchohol-free trend, other than to notice the astonishing rise in the number of flavored water ...
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By Marion Nestle

Weekend reading: The alcohol-free trend: it’s hot!

I subscribe to Beverage Dailyan industry publication, to learn about current trends I might otherwise miss.

I hadn’t been paying much attention to the alchohol-free trend, other than to notice the astonishing rise in the number of flavored water options in supermarkets.

With the new dietary guidelines arguing for less alcohol, this is a trend worth watching.

Here is a good place to begin:

Five emerging trends in the alcohol-free category: January puts the spotlight on alcohol-free drinks. What has this month taught us about the direction of the category in 2026 ?… Read more

The discussion of the five trends is aimed at beverage companies trying to sell products.

  • Sober-curious consumers are complicated, meaning they want to try lots of drinks.
  • They “zebra-stripe” (a new term to me), meaning they alternate between alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks in the same occasion.
  • Beverage companies need to come up with innovate ways to attract customers.
  • Non-alcoholic drinks should be functional (meaning containing something that can do something special) to attract customers.
  • Companies need to find new ways to attract customers to their brands.

Judging from what I’m seeing at supermarkets, introducing a new beverage is not going to be easy.  There are already loads of options out there.

Here are a couple of additional items on the alcohol-free trend:

The post Weekend reading: The alcohol-free trend: it’s hot! appeared first on Food Politics by Marion Nestle

Now Available: What to Eat Now

My new book, What to Eat Now, is officially out!

It's both a field guide to food shopping in America and a reflection on how to eat well—and deliciously.

For more information and to order, click here.

You can explore the full archive of this (almost) daily blog at foodpolitics.comwhere you'll also find information about my books, articles, media interviews, upcoming lectures, favorite resources, and FAQs.


​​​​​​​

Marion Nestle

Paulette Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, Emerita


© Marion Nestle. You're receiving this email because you've signed up to receive updates from us.

If you'd prefer not to receive updates, you can unsubscribe.


Thursday, 12 February 2026

Latest from Food Politics: Is the Dietary Guidelines' prioritizing of meat about industry lobbying or personal ideology?

In my post last week, “The government is actively promoting meat and dairy intake, ” I said The new Dietary Guidelines for Americans actively promote meat and dairy intake, especially full-fat dairy.   The USDA has long acted as a marketing arm ...
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By Marion Nestle

Is the Dietary Guidelines’ prioritizing of meat about industry lobbying or personal ideology?

In my post last week, “The government is actively promoting meat and dairy intake,” I said

The new Dietary Guidelines for Americans actively promote meat and dairy intake, especially full-fat dairy.  The USDA has long acted as a marketing arm of those industries through its research and promotion (checkoff) programs.

I then noted that this government takes promotion to new levels through its milk mustache ads and pronouncements that we have ended the war on protein (protein has long been understood as a euphemism for meat).

I ended with this comment: “I chalk all this up to the extraordinary lobbying power of the meat and dairy industries.”

Whew.  Did that ever get a response.

Readers raised two issues:

I.  The guidelines and inverted pyramid give equal weight to plant foods.

That’s not how I read them.  I see them as giving lip service to plants but prioritizing meat.  They visually present meat most prominently in the interactive graphic at realfood.gov.  Subsequent statements of the USDA and HHS secretaries also support this view.  And then there are the authors with financial links to beef industry groups who wrote the scientific reports relevent to meat.

II. This is not about meat industry lobbying; it is about Robert F. Kennedy, Jr’s ideology.  Well, yes.  That too.  “Ideology” refers to belief systems that structure views of the world.  Everybody has them.

I, for example, am ideologically in favor of the dietary guidelines’ advice to eat real food and avoid highly processed food, but ideologically opposed to advice to prioritize animal protein over plant protein.  I would argue that the vast preponderance of research supports that view.

People holding other ideological views disagree, evidently.  They pick different studies to read and come to different conclusions.

Two members of the nine people writing scientific reviews for the guidelines assure me that their reviews are unbiased.  But those reviews invariably reflect the ideology of the people who wrote them.

As I often point out, nutrition research is impossible to control rigorously, unless you lock people up for extended periods of time.  That is why the best controlled studies, those done in monitored metabolic wards, can only be done for a few weeks at most.  Diets are complicated; eaters are complicated; research is complicated.  Complicated research requires interpretation.  Interpretation depends on the interpreter’s particular ideology.

That is why appointing a diverse committee to look at research questions has its benefits; people with differing ideologies have to work out points of agreement.

I will say this for RFK, Jr.  He makes his ideology clear.  It prioritizes personal experience over science.

My ideology: We need science to distinguish anecdote from fact.

Let’s agree that on the meat priority issue, RFK Jr’s ideology fits well with meat industry objectives.

The meat industry has a long history of lobbying around dietary guidelines (see my book, Food Politics).

I have not seen specific reports of meat industry lobbying around the new dietary guidelines.  Apparently, no lobbying was necessary.

The post Is the Dietary Guidelines’ prioritizing of meat about industry lobbying or personal ideology? appeared first on Food Politics by Marion Nestle

Now Available: What to Eat Now

My new book, What to Eat Now, is officially out!

It's both a field guide to food shopping in America and a reflection on how to eat well—and deliciously.

For more information and to order, click here.

You can explore the full archive of this (almost) daily blog at foodpolitics.comwhere you'll also find information about my books, articles, media interviews, upcoming lectures, favorite resources, and FAQs.


​​​​​​​

Marion Nestle

Paulette Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, Emerita


© Marion Nestle. You're receiving this email because you've signed up to receive updates from us.

If you'd prefer not to receive updates, you can unsubscribe.


A Valentine's Day ❤️ reminder for physicians and your care teams

Yes! ❤️🕔 You're allowed to have a life!  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...