The Conversation

In 2001, an American study found that overweight or obese men with normal blood sugar, cholesterol and blood pressure had about the same risk of heart-related death as men of a “healthy” weight. It kickstarted the so-called “fat but fit” debate.

The debate has had many twists and turns over the past quarter of a century – a lot of which we’ve covered in The Conversation. Now, a large new study from Denmark adds weight to the evidence that being very thin can be more dangerous than being slightly overweight. Rachel Woods, a senior lecturer in physiology, explains why this shouldn’t surprise us.

Also today. we investigate why many companies hide their sustainability efforts – a practice called “greenhushing”. And after Donald Trump spent the night at Windsor castle, we look at the benefits of having a neutral king when it comes to state visits.

Clint Witchalls

Senior Health Editor

Being a bit overweight later in life may have protective health effects. Niks Ads/Shutterstock.com

‘Fat but fit’: what the latest study reveals

Rachel Woods, University of Lincoln

New research finds lowest risk of early death may not sit in the traditional healthy BMI range.

Cast Of Thousands/Shutterstock

‘Greenhushing’ is a trend that leaves businesses downplaying their environmental wins

Marta Nieto-Garcia, University of Portsmouth, Universidad de Salamanca; Diletta Acuti, University of Bath; Nayla Khan, University of Portsmouth

Why would companies be coy about doing good things?

The Trumps meet the Windsors for a second time. Alamy/Jonathan Brady

Why are state visits such powerful diplomatic tools? A constitutional expert explains

Stephen Clear, Bangor University

What happens beyond the pomp – and what role does the king play?

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