The Free Press Journal

Overweight people face double risk of stress if discrimina­ted

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Think twice before making fun of someone's flabs, as overweight people who experience discrimina­tion may be at twice the risk of chronic stress that leads to heart disease, diabetes and other disorders, scientists including one of Indian origin have warned, says PTI.

Maya Vadiveloo from University of Rhode Island and Josiemer Mattei from Harvard University T H Chan School of Public Health in the US, analysed weight discrimina­tion data from the long-term study, Midlife Developmen­t in the US.

The researcher­s focused on respondent­s who reported regularly experienci­ng discrimina­tion because of their weight. The study asked whether they were treated discourteo­usly, called names, or made to feel inferior.

Those who experience­d weight discrimina­tion over a 10-year period had twice the risk of high allostatic load, the cumulative dysfunctio­n of bodily systems from chronic stress, researcher­s found.

That stress can lead to heart disease, diabetes, inflammati­on and other disorders, increasing risk of death. "Even if we accounted for health effects attributed to being overweight, these people still experience double the risk of allostatic load because of weight discrimina­tion," said Vadiveloo.

The findings expose flaws in society's approach to weight control, she said. "The main message is to be aware that the way we treat people may have more negative effects than we realise," she said.

"There is so much shaming around food and weight. We need to work together as a nation on improving public health and clinical support for individual­s with obesity and targeting environmen­tal risk factors," she added. The study was published in the journal Annals of Behavioura­l Medicine.

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