The internet metabolises wellness trends the way it churns through celebrity divorce announcements and song snippets on TikTok. Health hacks such as drinking olive oil and bone broth crop up, then fall into obscurity. All these fads make the concept of “wellness” squishy: wait, we’re drinking lettuce water? When did
Ozempic, saunas and cottage cheese: Five wellness trends to watch in 2023
“Ozempic” has become an umbrella term for a new class of medications that can induce weight loss, in part by quashing one’s appetite and slowing the emptying of the stomach. There’s Ozempic itself, an injectable diabetes medication that has become increasingly popular as people use it as an off-label tool to lose weight. There’s also Wegovy, approved to treat obesity; Mounjaro, a similar diabetes drug; and others. Some consumers have tried to find unauthorised options, like supplements such as berberine.
Part of what’s so fascinating about drugs like Ozempic is how they affect the brain: users have described their “food noise” — the incessant, spiralling thoughts about eating — shutting off. As more people turn to these drugs, some are also navigating stark side effects: shrinking muscle mass, intense nausea, vomiting, constipation and even, in rare cases, malnutrition.
And the hype is just beginning: pharmaceutical companies are developing more potent drugs in this class, and a pill form of Ozempic is on the horizon.
Saunas are filling up
After a pandemic-induced chill, bathhouses are back, and more people are turning to them with the hopes of sweating out toxins or boosting their brain. Researchers say there isn’t clear evidence that saunas can do all that, but a trip to the steam room might offer some health benefits.
Supplements proliferate
Can’t focus? Can’t sleep? Are you taxing your poor immune system? Are you stressed about how stressed you are?
The multibillion-dollar supplement industry is eager to offer answers. One plant or another seems to go viral every few weeks (sea moss, anyone?). People have recently focused on supplements that soothe anxiety: ashwagandha, a staple of Ayurvedic medicine, broke into the mainstream this year, and thousands of TikTok posts have touted untested herbal remedies to lower cortisol levels.
Therapy is an aphrodisiac
Maybe your date keeps listing love languages, or your Hinge feed features people talking about their therapists. Psychological buzzwords have entered the world of dating, as people use and abuse the jargon. “Boundaries” abound; daters claim to form “trauma bonds” over espresso martinis; people complain about gaslighting and love bombing.
“Instead of being like, ‘I’m 5-11, and I can bench-press some large amount,’ it’s like, ‘I have grappled with the challenges of my childhood, and I’ve thought deeply about my issues,’” said Paul Eastwick, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis.
We’re craving protein
“We’ve just gone completely off the rails with protein in recent years,” Hannah Cutting-Jones, a food historian and the director of the food studies programme at the University of Oregon, told The New York Times this past winter.
Take protein bars: nutritionists say they are often little more than glorified candy. Or cottage cheese, which hit a 19-year high for Google searches in July. Protein is a key part of the appeal of cottage cheese; a half-cup packs roughly the same amount of protein as three eggs. Never mind that most Americans are meeting, and often exceeding, the recommended daily protein intake.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Dani Blum
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