Porterville Recorder

Healthy Conversati­ons About Weight Should Not Be Taboo

- W. gifford jones, md Follow us on Instagram @docgiff and @ diana_gifford_jones W. Gifford-jones, MD is a graduate of the University of Toronto and the Harvard Medical School.

This week launches a series of columns on the current crisis — not the COVID pandemic, which will eventually come to an end, but rather, the seemingly endless escalation of the type 2 diabetes pandemic. We begin this week with the greatest culprit: obesity. Worrisomel­y, changing attitudes about weight are making matters worse.

We’ll continue next week with an article on the interplay between diabetes and COVID, followed the subsequent week by a challenge to powerful media houses to do better.

Finally, as we know from your letters this column helps prevent many from falling victim to avoidable health problems, we’ll do a three-part series on the signs of pre-diabetes and where you can turn for help.

So, let’s turn to obesity, one of the greatest risk factors for type 2 diabetes. How can we resolve the obesity pandemic that worsens every year? Recently several well-respected researcher­s have argued weight loss isn’t the solution and obesity isn’t the problem! Rather, the goal, they say, is “good health.” But is ignoring the major health hazards of obesity an effective way to slow down the tsunami of type 2 diabetes?

In the consultati­on room, doctors need to be frank with their patients, and it would help if everyone else didn’t contradict the message. Make no mistake, obesity isn’t good for one’s health.

But “body shaming,” the label applied to those who humiliate people with critical comments and attitudes about body size or shape, has made any supportive discussion­s about weight issues taboo. Health promoting support is vastly different from stigmatizi­ng discrimina­tion. A study published in the Journal of Obesity showed tweight discrimina­tion stigma was associated with increased risk of becoming more obese!

So what’s the right approach to take if you’re concerned about a family member or friend? Experts recommend discussing ways to improve lifestyle, eating healthier foods, and exercising more. This column has argued for years a daily step on the bathroom scale should be a tactic for healthy weight maintenanc­e. When paired with diet and exercise, the scale can be an essential tool for those who need to lose excess pounds.

Is it possible to be healthy and obese? Research shows 30 minutes of exercises in obese individual­s, even if weight loss isn’t achieved, significan­tly improves physical health compared to sedentary peers.

Other researcher­s have studied healthy men comparing their cardiovasc­ular fitness to the amount of belly fat. The results show a relationsh­ip between the location of body fat and the risk of heart attack and diabetes. It’s the belly fat — called visceral fat that’s stored around important internal organs — that poses the greatest problem. Even being thin doesn’t equate to good health if hidden visceral fat is present in the belly.

Surgeons are well versed on belly fat. It makes operations more technicall­y demanding, with more blood loss, and more anesthesia required for longer operations. Following surgery, incisions are more apt to become infected, and if patients are less active, a fatal pulmonary embolism (blood clot) is more likely.

A natural product called “Appleslim,” sourced from unripe green apples in Central Asia that contain high concentrat­ions of apple polyphenol­s, attacks visceral belly fat. In addition to fighting obesity, the green coffee bean extract in Appleslim lowers blood pressure.

But the key message this week is, don’t let obesity unnecessar­ily elevate your risk of developing diabetes. If you’re struggling with excess weight, don’t struggle alone. Have a healthy conversati­on with someone who can support you in making a change.

Part one of a six-part series. Sign-up at www. docgiff.com. For comments, contact-us@docgiff. com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States