Galeno Field Notes began as a set of research notes accumulated over two years of work at the intersection of everyday cooking and published nutritional science. The notes grew into articles. The articles grew into a publication.
The founding editor, Eleanor Whitfield, spent several years working as a researcher for a registered nutrition charity before turning to independent writing. Her work at the charity involved reviewing published dietary research and translating it for a non-specialist audience — a practice that revealed how wide the gap between the research literature and popular wellness writing had grown.
Popular wellness content had become dominated by two registers: the aspirational lifestyle photograph with minimal copy, and the numbered listicle promising rapid transformation. Neither register was built to carry the nuance that the actual research required. Galeno Field Notes was founded to occupy a different register: long-form, evidence-referenced, and honest about the limits of what nutritional science currently knows.
The publication takes its name from a tradition of field notes in natural science — the documented observation, recorded in context, before the grand conclusion is drawn. It is the record of looking carefully at something before claiming to understand it.
Eleanor leads editorial direction and writes the long-form research reviews. Her background is in nutritional science communication and published dietary guideline analysis. Based in London.
Tobias covers the intersection of active lifestyle, sport nutrition, and whole-food eating. He writes on portion awareness, energy balance, and the weekly food journal practice. Formerly with a leading UK fitness publication.
Imogen contributes seasonal cooking and recipe-focused writing. Her work focuses on practical, whole-food meals adapted to the British growing calendar. Based in Bristol.
Diet and nutrition as daily practice — balanced plates, whole foods, calorie awareness, and the fibre-rich diet that published research consistently recommends for long-term wellbeing.
Mindful eating, portion control, meal planning, and the kind of slow, considered weight management approach that evidence suggests produces lasting results rather than short-term fluctuations.
Sport and fitness as part of a whole-life approach — hydration habits, nutrition timing around activity, and the link between movement and energy balance over the course of a week.
Gut-friendly recipes, home-cooked meals, and the British seasonal calendar as a practical framework for varied, nutritionally diverse eating throughout the year.
Galeno Field Notes operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.
The publication does not accept advertorial content that is presented as independent editorial. Where sponsorship or partnership exists, it is clearly labelled. The editorial calendar is set by the editorial team and is not influenced by commercial relationships.
Articles published on Galeno Field Notes are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
The publication reviews pitches on a quarterly basis. Writers with a background in nutrition, food writing, or adjacent editorial fields are welcome to send a brief outline and two published samples to the editorial address. Responses are not supported but all pitches received are read.
Writers are asked to cite primary sources where claims reference published research. Priority is given to peer-reviewed nutritional science, established dietary guideline bodies (NHS, EFSA, BDA), and institutional position papers. Secondary sources are used for context and are clearly labelled as such.
Galeno Field Notes is an independent editorial publication. It is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body. Where any commercial relationship exists, it is disclosed within the relevant article. The editorial team retains full control of subject selection and editorial framing.
Corrections are taken seriously. If a reader identifies a factual inaccuracy, they are encouraged to contact the editorial team at [email protected] with the relevant article URL and the specific claim in question. Confirmed corrections are noted within the article body with a dated correction notice.