Christopher Wanjek

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Christopher Wanjek is a health and science journalist and author based in the United States. He received his bachelor's degree in journalism from Temple University and his master's degree from the Harvard School of Public Health.[1]

He is the author of Bad Medicine: Misconceptions and Misuses Revealed, from Distance Healing to Vitamin O (Wiley & Sons, 2003) and of Food At Work: Workplace Solutions for Malnutrition, Obesity and Chronic Diseases (ILO, 2005). Food at Work, written for the International Labour Organization, has since been presented in numerous countries, largely in South America.[2] The concept for the "Food at Work" as well as the final product has been lauded by unions and nutritionists,[3][4] with emeritus professor of nutrition A. Stewart Truswell of University of Sydney describing it as "a beautifully designed, written and printed book [that] would have to be consulted by anyone advising on food at work anywhere in the world." [5] The project has inspired government legislation to improve worker feeding programs in Mexico,[6] Lithuania,[7] Uruguay[8] and elsewhere in South America.

As as astronomy writer, Wanjek worked at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland until 2007 and freelanced for astronomy magazines such Sky & Telescope and Astronomy.[9] He currently is the "Armchair Astrophysics" columnist for the Astronomical Society of the Pacific's Mercury Magazine.

As a health writer, Wanjek wrote many stories for CBS Healthwatch and the Washington Post health section between 1999 and 2004.[10] Since 2006 he has written a weekly column for LiveScience called Bad Medicine. His LiveScience column has criticized scientifically discredited statements by Pope Benedict XVI which claimed that condoms increase AIDS prevalence,[11] among other controversial topics.

While a student at Temple University, Wanjek was part of the Philadelphia comedy scene that produced comic Paul F. Tompkins and writer-director Adam McKay, his former housemate, among others. Wanjek has written for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno since 1998.[12]

References

  1. www.christopherwanjek.com
  2. Estudio marca la importancia de la buena alimentación para trabajadores
  3. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics, 20, no. 1 (2007): 51
  4. Occupational Medicine 2006;56:69–71
  5. Nutrition and Dietetics, 63, no. 2, (2006): 128-128
  6. El Universal, 18 April 2008, "Aumenta número de diabéticos en México"
  7. ELTA (Lithuanian News Agency), 24 April 2007, "Seime rengiama konferencija 'Naujas požiūris į darbuotojų mitybą darbe'
  8. Nuevo Espacio, 2008 October, "La alimentación de los trabajadores..." by Diputado Jorge Pozzi
  9. Sky & Telescope search, 2009
  10. [http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/results.html?st=basic&uid=&MAC=50a23aa1f3f5c6104e90e36051420d61&QryTxt=%22christopher+wanjek%22&x=11&y=9&sortby=REVERSE_CHRON. washingtonpost.com - search nation, world, technology and Washington area news archives]
  11. Pope's Condom Condemnation Distorts Truth
  12. "Leno Jokes". Christopher Wanjek. Retrieved 2013-10-21. 
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