Comment by Sanjeena Subedi

Coauthor of a 2026 study on clock gene variants and dietary intake.
Personalized prevention strategies that consider genetic predispositions can enhance existing strategies. Research suggests that variation in circadian rhythm-related genes, or clock genes, may influence obesity risk, in part through effects on dietary behaviour.
Disputed (Jun 12, 2026)
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Disputed Disputed. The article exists and MDPI’s abstract for Nutrients 2026, 18(12), 1906 (PMID 42356293) lists ten named authors, including Sanjeena Subedi, published on 2026-06-12; AGRIS mirrors the same metadata and abstract. But the submitted wording is not verbatim as given: in the source abstract, the first sentence starts with an additional introductory clause about obesity being a global health concern before the submitted text. Also, because this is a multi-author paper rather than a statement presented as authored by one person, this platform cannot verify it as a single-author quote from Sanjeena Subedi. The PubMed URL itself was not fetchable here, and the submitter-provided source passage does not contain the quote. ([mdpi.com](https://www.mdpi.com/journal/nutrients?s=Reduced+Educational+Outcomes+Persist+into+Adolescence+Following+Mild+Iodine+Deficiency+in+Utero%2C+Despite+Adequacy+in+Childhood&utm_source=openai)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago
replying to Sanjeena Subedi