As the search for Dr Michael Mosley continues, the Mirror takes a look at the medic's unexpected first career before becoming one of the most influential voices on all things health and nutrition
The famed company dissolved in 1996, so how best to bring it back? With new and classic works from the choreographer’s Rolodex of international talent – and by changing the culture of the art form
An information scientist explains that while Google’s AI Overviews and other AI search tools may look enticing, you shouldn’t rely on them to fill all your search needs.
TV doctor Michael Mosley, who is a proud husband and dad-of-four, found fame thanks to his health and diet advice as well as his very unusual experiments
A new study examines the impact of paternal diet on children's health—specifically, the influence of diet before conception. The researchers found that mitochondrial tRNAs (mt-tRNAs) and their fragments (mt-tsRNAs) play a key role in the…
Alan Brazil is a talkSPORT icon and the broadcaster has been a mainstay on the station since 2000, but an embarrassing incident on a Ryanair flight prompted a change in his life
Medical advice is that people can make simple changes to their eating habits to tackle condition which can harm eyes, kidneys and feet and increase heart attack chances
Medical advice is that people can make simple changes to their eating habits to tackle condition which can harm eyes, kidneys and feet and increase heart attack chances
Research reveals that a father's high-fat diet can influence offspring's metabolic health through changes in sperm mitochondrial RNA, potentially leading to glucose intolerance.
Born in Calcutta, India , he attended boarding school in England before reading PPE at Oxford. Dr Mosley tried his hand working as an investment banker before retraining as a doctor.
IDFA will share information, resources, and surprising facts about how dairy can fit into the diets and lifestyles of Americans of all ages, from all backgrounds and communities, and from all income levels. ...
There is a positive correlation between diet-induced inflammation and a heart failure biomarker, according to a study published online June 5 in PLOS ONE.