Comment by Jess Haines

Family health and nutrition researcher; 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 PubMed itself was not fetchable in this session, but MDPI and index records corroborate that PMID 42356293 is the Nutrients article published on 2026-06-12. The stored quote is not verbatim—the abstract begins "Obesity remains a global health concern, and personalized prevention strategies..." before the submitted wording—and the paper has 10 individual authors including Jess Haines, so it cannot be verified here as a single-author Jess Haines quote. ([pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42356293/)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago
replying to Jess Haines