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Daniel V's avatar

Though not as clear-cut as you might want, and more gradual than your examples, pre and post WWii Okinawa provides a natural experiment, in particular when it comes to the food environment.

The socioeconomically relatively poor Okinawans had, up to WWii, access largely to vegetables, including a staple, sweet potatoes, and had e.g. exceptionally high longevity and number of centenarians per capita. After WWii their food access gradually Americanized, but also Japanized, and 2015 male Okinawans ranked 36th of 47 prefectures in life expectancy. For example, Okinawa has Japan's highest number of hamburger restaurants per capita. [1]

(All weight gain can be explained with increased supply.[1])

[1] For references to the claims, see the linked draft, section 1.5.2, first paragraph:

http://dx.doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/bq438

PS: Great NYT article!

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Gardening in Wisconsin's avatar

Another important aspect of RCTs and applying to the care of individual patients is answering the question, “Were patients like the one in front of me in the RCT?” Often study participants have more social capital and higher levels of functioning than the population at large. The examples you cite help address this concern as well as the “Study Effect” which has a favorable influence regardless of the group to which participants are randomized.

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