Taylor Swift (Credit: Canva)
Whether or not you are a Swiftie, you must have seen that one part from her recent song "Anti-Hero" where she is seen standing on a weighing scale. However, it wasn't the first time you saw her in a video or a social media post linked to body image. In the past, the global music superstar has opened up several times about her eating disorder. But does it have an impact on her fans? Turns out, yes!
A new study reveals that Taylor's candidness about her struggles with body image and eating disorders may be helping her fans adopt healthier attitudes toward their own eating habits and body perceptions. The research, conducted by the University of Vermont (UVM), was published in Social Science & Medicine. Swift's openness about her body image issues and recovery from eating disorders has influenced her fanbase.
Researchers analyzed over 200 posts on platforms like TikTok and Reddit, accumulating 8,300 comments to gauge the impact of her disclosures on her followers. Lizzy Pope, a dietitian nutritionist, and the study's lead author, said that the study's findings suggest that fans who feel a strong connection to Swift were inspired to make positive changes in their behaviours or attitudes toward eating and body image due to her openness.
Swift has long been open about her struggles with body image, notably sharing her personal challenges in the 2020 Netflix documentary Miss Americana. In the film, she discussed her battle with an eating disorder, and in her 2022 song “You’re On Your Own Kid,” she even alluded to “starving her body.” By sharing her journey, Swift has been able to humanize these often-taboo issues, helping to normalize conversations around eating disorders and self-esteem struggles, especially among her fans.
The study’s authors, Pope and Kelsey Rose, a UVM clinical assistant professor who specializes in treating eating disorders, found that Swift’s honesty has had a therapeutic effect on her followers. Fans have expressed that hearing about Swift's recovery made them feel less isolated and more willing to seek help for their own body image issues. According to Rose, “Fans seemed to take inspiration from the fact that Swift had recovered from disordered eating and subsequently appeared to be thriving.” This positive shift in mindset suggests that Swift’s influence goes beyond her music, inspiring many fans to address their own health challenges.
However, while the study highlights the positive influence of Swift’s openness, it also uncovered some underlying issues. Researchers noted that despite the positive tone of many comments, there was still a tendency for some fans to objectify Swift and focus on her physical appearance. For instance, some comments included remarks like “she’s gained weight, she looks so happy and healthy now.” While these comments were likely meant to be supportive, they reflect a broader societal tendency to focus on body image, even when discussing someone’s recovery. Pope pointed out that these comments still indicate that many fans have not fully embraced Swift's message to stop commenting on people’s bodies. “Even if it was meant to be positive, fans would still comment, which means that they didn’t completely internalize her message of, ‘please do not comment on people’s bodies anymore,’” Pope explained.
The study also sheds light on the broader cultural context of body objectification, particularly regarding female celebrities. Pope emphasized that there is a long-standing tradition of objectifying women’s bodies, with celebrities often praised more for their appearance than their achievements. "Taylor Swift can do more to change attitudes with a few sentences than we can do in our entire careers," said Pope. "So, it’s important to study people that have that kind of impact."
Furthermore, Swift’s current Eras tour is challenging industry norms by featuring a diverse group of dancers with varying body types, rejecting the notion that professional dancers must fit a particular body size. This inclusion reflects Swift’s commitment to promoting body diversity and celebrating different forms of beauty.
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We have all have experienced fevers, there are many different beliefs about it in different cultures and multiple ways to treat it, ranging from modern medicine to ancient practices. When one has a fever, their body feels warm and weak, they also do not have energy to do extended movements. As fevers are a range, some being slight to others being signs of dangerous conditions, dealing with them can be tricky. Things like fever dreams, conversations and thoughts are often incoherent. There are things called fever hallucinations as well, but why does this happen?
Fever means your body temperature has gone above what's normal. But what's "normal" can be a bit different for everyone and can change based on how active you are and the time of day. Generally, a fever is when your temperature is higher than 99 degrees Fahrenheit in the early morning or above 100 degrees Fahrenheit at any other time.
In a 2013 review published in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, the researchers found that not only do fevers cause people to feel cold, weak and other bodily sensations, but the participants also expressed emotional changes, vivid dreams/hallucinations.
In one of the interview with a participant from the study, researches noted them experiencing feelings of anxiousness, crabby, angry and frustrated, “Like I said, I think fever is really tied in to how you feel emotionally. Because I know every time I have a fever, I just get snotty, for lack of a better term, because I'm just really agitated.”
“I feel tired. I feel irritable”
Harvard Heath explains a part of your brain called the hypothalamus acts like a thermostat for your body. When you're healthy, it keeps your body at its usual temperature. A fever happens when the hypothalamus gets set to a higher temperature than normal. This change in the brain's thermostat is usually caused by tiny things in your blood called pyrogens.
According to a 2023 review by Yale School of Medicine heat can change things in the environment, it can also change how our brains work. In a study, researchers found that even small increases in temperature while the brain is active can really change what the brain does, and sometimes these changes can be negative.
Experts from Yale explain that changes in temperature in the brain also affect how our nerve cells (neurons) fire signals. These cells have tiny pumps that give them electrical energy, which they release when the brain is active. The researchers found that if brain cells get heated up too fast, faster than these pumps can adjust, the cells might become more active or less active than usual.
Even tiny temperature changes from brain stimulation can lead to big changes in neuron activity. As neurons get warmer, they can even stop working, and when they cool down again, they can become very easily excited.
According to an Infections & Chemotherapy 2022 review, fevers can cause febrile convulsions, which is a seizure caused by a fever in young kids. It can also cause confusion, like not understanding where you are, not recognizing your surroundings. It can also cause unstable emotions, conscious and cognitive disturbances like illusions on hallucinations.
These can also be symptoms for things like influenza infections or encephalitis. Like the Yale experts explained even small temperature changes can have such a big impact on brain activity, we need to start paying attention to these small changes. He points out that it's a basic rule of physics that when you send electricity through wires to stimulate the brain, you will create heat, both in the wires and in the brain tissue itself.
Researching more on these matters can help us find better treatments and help doctors change the course of several procedures to help their patients.
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Turkey has banned elective caesarean surgeries for childbirth at private hospitals and healthcare centres. "Planned Caesarean sections cannot be performed in a medical centre," said a gazette entry outlining new regulations governing private healthcare institutions in Turkey. It came as the country's president, Tyyip Recep Erdogan, has been pushing hard to have women give natural births, asserting that C Section surgeries promoted Western culture.
The move has triggered massive criticism from the opposition and right-wing organisations. "As if the country had no other problems, male football players are telling women how to give birth," Gokce Gokcen, deputy chair of the main opposition CHP, on X. Meanwhile, many human rights and women's rights organisations have also raised their voices against this new law, calling it out for restricting women's rights and liberty.
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C-section or caesarean birth is a surgical procedure wherein a baby is delivered through incisions made in mother's abdomen and uterus. The name caesarean comes from the Latin word "caedare" which means "to cut." Interestingly, there are rumours that link the name to Roman emperor Julius Caesar, stating that he was the first person to be born via this procedure. However, there are no records of this.
However, there are many cases where a caesarean section surgery becomes almost necessary. A doctor may order a C-section if:
There are many complications that come with this method of delivering a child. They include:
ALSO READ: Dishonesty Is 'More Than A Vice', It Could Make You Sick With
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Being dishonest doesn’t come naturally to people, it is a learned virtue, whether out of necessity or pleasure. When kids lie, a lot of it stems from them not wanting to get in trouble, for example, breaking a household item or doing something they were told not to do like running around inside the house. However, when people do learn to tell lies, it can become like a go to tendency for many. It is easier to make something up rather than explaining complex truths.
According to a study published in the Psychological Science 2015, kids start lying around the age of two to three years old. Their habit then progresses rapidly, till the age of 3 and 7.
Not all lies are the same, some are really small and don't hurt anyone, like saying you like someone's new haircut even though you don't. These little white lies often just help keep things smooth and make people feel good. Then there are much bigger lies, like saying someone else did something wrong when they didn't, or lying to people about money. These kinds of lies can cause a lot of damage and have bad consequences for people's lives.
When we know that being dishonest could really hurt how others see us, the act of lying itself makes our bodies feel stressed. When we tell a lie, things start to happen without us even thinking about it. A 2015 review published in the Current Opinion in Psychology explains that our heart might beat faster, we might start to sweat a little and our mouth can feel really dry. These physical changes are what those old-fashioned lie-detector tests used to try and pick up on.
Some people don't feel as much empathy as others, and they might not have the usual stressed reaction when they lie. The American Psychological Association explains that some people can learn to control their bodies really well and might be able to lie and still pass a lie-detector test. On the other hand, someone who is telling the truth but is just really nervous about being tested might look like they are lying.
While it's not common, some people might have a really strong physical reaction to lying, like feeling sick to their stomach or even throwing up a lot. This shows how connected our gut and our brain are. When we feel really anxious, like when we are worried about getting caught in a lie, it can actually make our stomach feel bad. So, for someone who is constantly lying and worried about it, this anxiety could potentially lead to physical sickness.
Living a life where you are often not telling the truth can actually take a toll on your health over time, not just in the moment. Research has suggested that people who lie a lot might have problems like high blood pressure, their heart might beat faster more often, their blood vessels could get tighter, and they might have more stress hormones in their bodies on a regular basis.
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