Posted on 02/15/2017 4:30:56 PM PST by nickcarraway
Self-proclaimed weight loss hypnosis master Steve Miller has announced a campaign to see all overweight NHS staff wearing badges that read Im fat, but Im losing it. He also wants all restaurant menus to carry the warning that if youre fat, think before ordering.
It would be easy to discount Millers campaign as a publicity stunt, but doing so would ignore the damaging consequences it is likely to have. Scientific evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that this sort of obesity stigma is an ineffective way to reduce the incidence of obesity, and in fact perpetuates it. If this strategy supported losing weight, the obesity epidemic would already be over, because obese people are frequently framed as lazy, gluttonous and targets for ridicule as it is.
Body shaming
Obesity stigma, guilt, and shame reinforce high body weights and can even promote weight gain. Experiencing obesity stigma often leads people to adopt coping strategies that undermine physical health such as comfort eating, or avoiding exercise in case they are made to feel embarrassed about their bodies. Obesity stigma has also been strongly linked with depression and compromised mental health .
Author provided Simplistic promotion of individual weight loss also fails to consider scientific evidence which shows that hunger is elevated in obese populations, and that it takes more effort for an obese person to exercise, as they have a greater amount of body weight than a lighter person doing the same activity. In many cases weight loss is not simple or easy.
The way obesity is currently addressed though it may be with the best of intentions does not generally support overweight/obese people to lose weight, or indeed promote the health of those who are most in need. Obesity and associated health behaviours for example eating fruit and vegetables, and being physically active are linked with social inequality. So even where someone may want to lose weight, their circumstances may make it difficult for them to do so.
At present obesity campaigns tend to focus on this idea of individual choice, but the evidence suggests that making it easier for everyone to access healthy food and to be physically active would do far more.
Fat but fit
Focusing on obesity and individual weight loss also ignores another key issue: that a person may be obese and yet healthy at the same time. Indeed, there is growing research that questions whether being overweight/obese is always detrimental to a persons health.
Many people use BMI to measure their own weight and health, but this indicator is inaccurate, and cannot portray a true picture of physical health. For instance, someone with a healthy BMI, or who looks slim, may not actually be in good health (think about regular smokers, for example). Likewise more muscular people, like rugby players, are often categorised as having an obese BMI but are in good health.
It has been scientifically proven that some obese people with high levels of fat can also be in good physical health. In 2012, a US study with over 40,000 participants found that the difference between healthy and unhealthy obese people was fitness levels: the people who were metabolically healthy but obese were fitter. Whats more, this fat but fit group had no higher risk of death or illness than their normal-fat fit peers.
BMI has confused the public over what healthy can mean. Giuseppe Elio Cammarata Similarly, a British study found that an overweight or obese person is more likely to be metabolically healthy when they lead an active lifestyle and have moderate-to-high levels of fitness. This remains the case irrespective of age, smoking status, alcohol consumption and waist measurement. Furthermore, despite 78% of the men studied being classified as either overweight or obese according to BMI, the vast majority around 84% of them were actually metabolically healthy. In fact, only 3.7% were classified metabolically unhealthy obese, which was comparable to the prevalence of metabolically unhealthy people within the normal weight group (3.4%).
Support not stigma
What these findings reveal is that whether or not someone is regularly physically active is more important than if they are overweight or obese. In terms of promoting health, the cultural obsession with weight loss is unnecessary and ineffective. Additionally, the continued focus on individual willpower and responsibility disguises the impact of social inequality and to this extent blames the victim.
Millers idea latches onto the trend of treating obesity as an individual health issue, but it would be far more constructive to deal with the social factors that stop people being physically active, and also to recognise that being overweight/obese does not necessarily mean that someone is unhealthy or indeed lazy.
It is those who continue to ignore scientific evidence and the long established link between inequality and health who should be obliged to wear badges proclaiming that they are losing it. Continuing to stigmatise obesity and to treat it as an individual issue is unhelpful and ineffective. The focus needs to be on creating social conditions that make healthy living the easy choice for all.
Tell that to Michael Moore! Tell him to keep up the good work, until he explodes.
I have a VERY obese cousin who has very normal EVERYTHING!! Her drs. are AMAZED!!!
I’d love to see him go out like Mr.Creosote did.
It’s extremely obvious that fatness is often genetic. As is thinness. Look at some peoples of the world who tend to be “fat” or “thin”.
Some people just can’t help it, and others might waver easily so can help it.
My genes are “thin” though now I am not, technically. My dad’s family is replete with thinness and when I was younger, I struggled to GAIN weight and keep it. (After 35 that changes!)
Because that’s the PC thing to say. They’d never dare say it’s “neutral” or any such thing.
Yeah, I bother my husband about it but HE is the healthy one. I am the one who is constantly fighting chronic (often unknown) diseases that debilitate me. I have a gazillion specialists and lots of pills.
Some of it is genes, especially when it comes to diseases like cancer, but being way overweight is not good. Saying that the BMI and obesity weight needs to change. People are stocky muscular, thin , but because they are thin doe snot mean they have no fat.
trying to tell us that being way overweight is not a problem is the PC crap to make the fat women feel good about themselves.
Have you given serious thought to your reply? Saying that "being fat is just fine" is the PC thing to say.Saying anything else is "fat shaming" in the world of PC.And yes it's true...PC is known to break out at Harvard on occasion,even at the Medical School.But not this time.
I know because I'm about 30 pounds overweight and I'm suffering the consequences.
test numbers are not the whole picture. how’s your cousin’s joints? various other organs can have issues just due to excess weight over time but not necessarily show up in routine test numbers. Lots of obese people don’t sleep well, end up needing CPap etc. Obese is not healthy.
I’m glad your cousin has good test numbers but they should consider the whole picture of health not just what a certain doctor tells them.
the bmi is a complete fraud.
Yeah, and driving drunk doesn’t necessarily mean you will get into an accident or even get a ticket.
But still...
I would agree with this. A short person with a muscular build can never meet the ideal BMI measure. A lot of healthy people are not built like ballet dancers or ultra-marathoners.
Our poorest people are the most likely to be obese. That’s like something out of Swift. The creation of super cheap fattening processed food combined with social assistance allowed a situation that has never before happened in human history. I wonder if there could ever be any sort of sustained civil unrest while the poorest also tend to be the most obese.
Freegards
the bmi was created to create, overnite, 20+ million people who were just fine, to now be overweight or obese based solely on weight and height, and nothing else.
the epitomy of junk science fraud.
“A short person with a muscular build can never meet the ideal BMI measure.”
Nor can a tall one! I am six four and 250, obese according to the BMI but no one who has seen me recently thinks I have any excess weight problem, most simply cannot believe that I weigh that much. If I weighed what the charts say I should weigh I would look like a stick figure. At 200 I’m a scarecrow.
The BMI is a poor indicator of fat to muscle ratio and even worse at estimating “fatness”. It will be gone in a few years as a “score” for any reason.
As noted in the article being well muscled may well indicated a number over 30 and that the person is obese yet that person may have huge muscles.
It is much better to get weighed in a pool of water and weighed out of water to get percent of body fat. This is the only reliable method.
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