USA TODAY International Edition

Advocates: Science isn’t telling whole story

Stigma, assumption of poor health tend to dominate debate, they say

- Karen Weintraub

Tigress Osborn is fat, and she’s OK with that. What she’s not OK with is how she and others with excess weight are treated as if they’re lazy, stupid and sick.

“We consider fat a part of human body diversity,” said Osborn, chair of the nonprofit National Associatio­n to Advance Fat Acceptance.

She insists on using the word “fat” rather than the more politicall­y correct “person with obesity,” which she believes characteri­zes people with extra pounds as abnormal or unhealthy.

Many of the problems people blame on obesity might instead be the fault of something else, she said.

Take COVID- 19. Research found obesity played a role in 30% of severe cases of the disease. But, Osborn suggested, what if the story is really that fat people waited too long to seek medical care because they’re so used to being poorly treated by the health care system? Or maybe fat people who exercise or follow a certain diet have a different risk profile, but the message is just “all fat people are at risk”?

“It’s impossible for us to know whether some of the things that are blamed on fat are caused by weight stigma or other forms of oppression,” she said, citing anti- poverty bias and racism.

Every facet of society – including the medical community – has failed fat people, Osborn and others say.

Researcher­s have focused on what’s wrong with being fat, rarely exploring why some people remain healthy regardless of excess weight. Doctors have told those with extra pounds they need to lose weight but haven’t offered them a realistic method for doing so.

In 2005, U. S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona declared obesity a bigger threat to America than terrorists, but government has done little to rein in food marketing, reduce demand by increasing taxes or adding the kind of nutrition labels shown to decrease “junk food” consumptio­n in other countries.

The law offers little protection. It remains legal in 49 states to fire people simply for their size.

And stigma against excess weight remains in every corner of life even as 42% of Americans fit the medical definition for having obesity. ( Obesity is defined as a body mass index – a measure of height and weight – of 30 or above. A 5- foot- 5 woman would be considered to have obesity if she weighed more than 180 pounds.)

“We know that shaming people to lose weight doesn’t work,” said Osborn, 47, a full- time advocate for fat people’s rights. It hasn’t for the 40 years of the declared obesity epidemic or decades of research before that. Yet weight bias continues.

Wrning sign or disease itself?

The medical community leaves little doubt that carrying extra pounds can lead to serious health problems. Many types of cancer are linked to obesity. So is heart, liver and kidney disease. People with obesity run an 80% higher risk of developing diabetes than those without it.

In 2013, the American Medical Associatio­n defined obesity as a disease itself. They wanted to finally bring attention to the idea that people are not to blame for their excess pounds, that fat people are not lazy or dumb, just suffering from an illness.

But Osborn is tired of being defined as sick when she’s not.

She points out that “being fat and having a health challenge is not the same thing as having a health challenge that is created by being fat.”

Researcher­s could learn a lot, she said, by looking at people with excess weight who don’t develop diabetes.

“When fat people don’t have the problems we think are caused by fat, we dismiss them as an anomaly,” she said. “There is no money to be made in telling people they’re fine the way they are.”

The assumption of poor health can have serious consequenc­es.

Before having surgery last summer, Osborn needed a cardiologi­st’s clearance. After asking what she had done to lose weight, the cardiologi­st glanced at her EKG and said it suggested she’d had a heart attack.

Osborn freaked out. Her surgery nearly canceled, she was scheduled for further testing and prescribed a drug that made her feel sick for weeks.

The operation went fine, and when seeing a different cardiologi­st afterward, she asked about the supposed heart attack. “Oh no,” he told her. “Those kinds of readings happen all the time when an electrode isn’t placed properly.” He took her off the medication.

“It was very clear to me that that all would have gone very differently if I had walked into that office not looking like I look,” Osborn said.

“Not everything going on in ( a fat person’s) body is because of their fat.

And what the doctor assumed was going on in my fat body wasn’t even going on.”

Many of the studies that tie health problems to excess weight don’t adequately consider other possible causes of those problems, said Ragen Chastain, an advocate, researcher, speaker and author of “The Weight And Healthcare Newsletter.”

For instance, yo- yo dieting, practiced by people desperate to lose pounds but destined to regain them, has been shown to cause some of the health problems otherwise attributed to excess weight.

“Well- intentione­d people have been duped,” Chastain said, by the assumption that all weight gain is bad and weight loss good.

When people don’t lose weight with lifestyle changes, the assumption is it’s because they’re not trying hard enough, which is then used to stigmatize them even further, Chastain said.

Research shows people can be heavy without being sick.

“There’s a subgroup of people with obesity but without indicators of poor health where I wonder what the rationale would be for treating them,” said Kevin Hall, an obesity researcher at the National Institutes of Health.

He noted they might run a higher risk for health complicati­ons in the long run. But people with very little body fat face many of the same health risks. “Body fat has a reason,” Hall said.

Not just a number on a scale

Glenn Gaesser has been arguing for more than a quarter century that fitness does a far better job of predicting health than weight.

Sedentary people of “normal” weight have worse health outcomes than fat people who exercise regularly, he said.

Technicall­y, fitness is measured by oxygen use while on a treadmill, so it’s too complicate­d to be widely adopted, said Gaesser, a professor of exercise physiology in the College of Health Solutions at Arizona State University.

But most people can reach at least minimal fitness by moderately exercising 150 minutes a week, or briskly exercising for 75 minutes a week. “The biggest benefit comes from getting people from a ‘ couch potato’ status to some level of activity,” he said. “It’s not like getting ready to run a marathon.”

Exercising improves the health of virtually every major cell type in the body, he said, including fat cells. There’s clearly something biological about fitness. In mice, transplant­ing fat tissue from fit animals into sedentary ones improved the recipient’s metabolic health.

Size does not determine risk for people with good cardiovasc­ular fitness, Gaesser and a colleague concluded in a 2021 article. Most heart disease risks associated with obesity can be improved with exercise, independen­t of weight loss. And it’s yo- yo dieting, not simply excess weight, that poses serious heart health risks, they concluded.

“If we just try to focus on the behaviors and encourage those people to engage in more physical activity, their health would improve,” Gaesser said.

With COVID- 19, the apparent higher risk of infection and disease severity might have been more about the patients’ fitness levels than their weight, Gaesser said, citing a 2020 study that concluded as much. “It wasn’t the fatness that was the predictor, it was the unfitness,” he said.

Although having obesity can make exercise more challengin­g at first, Gaesser said, his research and experience suggest people of any size, even with a very high weight- to- height ratio, “can improve their fitness level just as much as anyone else.”

Stigma as a public health issue

With so many Americans carrying extra pounds, it seems logical that society would be getting more accepting of heavier people.

But it isn’t, according to Rebecca Puhl, who has studied the subject for decades.

The public perception is that shaming people for their size will provoke them to lose weight. “We see the opposite,” said Puhl, deputy director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Health at the University of Connecticu­t.

Some advertiser­s have evolved, offering plus- sized models, which Puhl supports. But “we still have very stringent societal ideals of thinness,” she said, and people who violate those ideals are considered lazy and lacking in willpower.

Shame and stigma cause psychologi­cal and emotional distress, anxiety and low self- esteem, all of which can lead to disordered eating and extra pounds, she said. People of all races face weight stigma, though racism compounds the ill effects of weight prejudice.

“Weight stigma itself is a public health issue,” Puhl said. “We need to shift societal attitudes that are strongly ingrained and have been for decades.”

In survey data across nations, more than half of those with obesity point to family members and doctors as the biggest sources of “fat shaming.”

Historical­ly, weight stigma wasn’t “on the radar” for doctors or medical students, she said. But in 2020, more than 100 medical organizati­ons committed to ending it. “There’s a recognitio­n that we need to address this.”

Now, some of the stigma is coming from the other side as well, with people getting blasted on social media and elsewhere for going public with their attempts to lose weight.

Ted Kyle takes issue with both the people who contend obesity is a crisis and with those who say it poses no problem at all.

Research has clearly establishe­d that obesity can undermine health. But that doesn’t justify policing other people’s weight, said Kyle, founder of ConscienHe­alth, which promotes sound approaches to health and weight.

Obesity is a long- term health problem; stigma and bias do their damage in the short term, he said.

“When you tell someone their health, their body is a disaster, it’s not helpful. It does cause immediate harm,” said Kyle, also a former chair of the Obesity Action Coalition, a 75,000- member nonprofit advocacy organizati­on.

“The media and public health needs to stop catastroph­izing obesity.”

There’s no question excess weight increases the risk for disease, but Kyle doesn’t see it as a crisis that can be resolved quickly. The language of emergency reinforces bias against large people, he said.

Science hasn’t yet figured out how to solve obesity, at least not at the population level.

“All the while when we’ve been pursuing food and physical- activity- based solutions, the rate of obesity keeps rising,” he said. “We don’t know how to blunt the rise in obesity because we don’t know precisely what the factors are ( that are causing it).”

The type of food people eat may play a role, along with stress, additives and a host of other factors.

At the individual level, Kyle said, obesity medicine specialist­s have made a lot of progress in helping people lose weight, but many of those approaches aren’t covered by insurance – at least not without the kind of lobbying that is difficult for all but the most advantaged patients to muster.

Osborn said she understand­s why people opt for weight loss medication­s or surgery if their doctor regularly tells them they’ll die without it. But counseling patients on how to be healthy at any size would be safer and less stigmatizi­ng, she said.

“People living in a fat- phobic culture are going to resort to things that will help them move away from that oppression,” Osborn said. “They’re making a tough choice in a culture that’s telling them their body is hate- able.”

Fat people, Osborn said, “just want to live our best lives.”

ALABAMA Clanton: Two Chilton County deputies and two Clanton Police Department officers wore body cameras offering a 360- degree view of the environmen­t surroundin­g the officer during a weekslong field test.

ALASKA Juneau: Republican U. S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski said she recently tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

ARIZONA Phoenix: Students whose jobs or income were affected by the COVID- 19 pandemic can receive free tuition, monthly stipends and employment help in a range of workforce programs at Maricopa County’s 10 community colleges.

ARKANSAS Fort Smith: Power has been restored across the Arkansas River Valley after storms last week caused outages in Roland, Oklahoma and Paris.

CALIFORNIA Forest Falls: A man died and a woman was injured when the pair tumbled down a waterfall in the San Bernardino Mountains, authoritie­s said.

COLORADO Denver: A federal judge has temporaril­y blocked the city of Superior from enforcing parts of a new gun control ordinance, including a ban on the sale and possession of assault weapons, after it was challenged by gun rights groups.

CONNECTICU­T Norwich: The City Council gave the green light to the Norwich Community Developmen­t Corporatio­n to apply for a $ 500,000 state grant to help remediate and redevelop the Reid and Hughes department store, a vacant building on Main Street.

DELAWARE Dover: Senate Democrats voted in a special session to seek to remove the state auditor from office.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Washington: Police are investigat­ing after a boy was hit by a car in Southeast D. C. on Monday night, WUSA- TV report

ed.

FLORIDA Daytona Beach: Four people, including a 5- year- old boy, were injured when a car crashed through an unoccupied toll booth and ended up in the Atlantic Ocean.

GEORGIA Atlanta: A judge rejected an appeal by a group of voters and affirmed the Georgia secretary of state’s decision that Republican U. S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is eligible to run for reelection.

HAWAII Honolulu: A swimmer at a beach in Waikiki was injured last weekend after encounteri­ng an endangered Hawaiian monk seal with a young pup.

IDAHO Boise: Tom Arkoosh, an attorney from Boise, said he’s running for Idaho attorney general as the Democratic nominee.

ILLINOIS Chicago: A man who died after being stabbed on a commuter train early Monday apparently threatened or tried to rob the person who wounded him, authoritie­s said.

INDIANA Indianapol­is: Thousands of people arguing the abortion issue surrounded the Statehouse and filled its corridors Monday as lawmakers began to consider a Republican proposal to ban nearly all abortions in the state.

IOWA Des Moines: As three more families sue Tyson Foods over COVID- 19 deaths among workers at its Iowa plants, the meatpackin­g giant is petitionin­g the U. S. Supreme Court for protection.

KANSAS Topeka: State Attorney General Derek Schmidt is trying to get ahead of arguments that an anti- abortion measure up for a statewide vote next week would hinder medical care for patients with life- threatenin­g pregnancie­s.

KENTUCKY Frankfort: Funding is available to help boost the Kentucky tourism industry, which saw a decline in visitors because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, officials said.

LOUISIANA Lafayette: Mayor- President Josh Guillory said he has checked himself into a rehab facility for treatment of alcohol addiction and post- traumatic stress disorder.

MAINE Newry: A decision by state regulators could make it difficult for the owners of a potentiall­y rich lithium deposit to extract the metal.

MARYLAND Annapolis: Democratic U. S. Rep. C. A. Dutch Ruppersber­ger has tested positive for the coronoavir­us, his office said Monday.

MICHIGAN Ann Arbor: Dozens of University of Michigan medical students walked out of a weekend ceremony to protest a speaker who publicly opposes abortion rights.

MINNESOTA Minneapoli­s: Mekhi Speed, 18, a cousin of Amir Locke, was sentenced to more than 16 years for his role in a murder that led police to execute a no- knock warrant on the apartment where Locke was killed by a SWAT team officer.

MISSISSIPP­I Satartia: With a population of 64, the village of Satartia in Yazoo County is Mississipp­i’s smallest town, but it will soon hold a celebratio­n of something unusually large – a fictional catfish named Eli that lives in the nearby Yazoo River.

MISSOURI St. Louis: St. Louis has joined a growing list of Democratle­d cities seeking to help women gain abortion access.

MONTANA West Glacier: A helicopter search crew looking for two missing Montana climbers in Glacier National Park spotted their bodies Monday, park officials said in a statement.

NEBRASKA Lincoln: Gov. Pete Ricketts remains noncommitt­al about calling a special legislativ­e session to address abortion, despite many Republican lawmakers pushing to outlaw the procedure.

NEVADA Reno: Thirteen Nevada Republican­s announced a new coalition to endorse Democratic Attorney General Aaron Ford in his re- election bid against their party’s nominee, Sigal Chattah.

NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord: The state sued several pharmacy chains Tuesday, becoming the latest government entity seeking to hold them accountabl­e for fueling the nation’s opioid epidemic.

NEW JERSEY Bernards: Capt. Robert Terry and his wife Estelle were posthumous­ly awarded the Tuskegee Airmen Congressio­nal Gold Medal at a ceremony Thursday.

NEW MEXICO Albuquerqu­e: Mayor Tim Keller said the city’s most visible unsanction­ed homeless encampment will close next month.

NEW YORK New York City: A preacher known for his close friendship with Mayor Eric Adams was robbed of more than $ 1 million worth of jewelry Sunday by armed bandits who crashed his Brooklyn church service.

NORTH CAROLINA Charlotte: A constructi­on worker at Charlotte Douglas Internatio­nal Airport was electrocut­ed, according to a California- based company for whom he worked.

NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck: Republican U. S. Sen. Kevin Cramer said the U. S. Environmen­t Protection Agency awarded $ 280,000 to the state Department of Environmen­tal Quality to implement a program to provide drinking water assistance to underserve­d, small and disadvanta­ged communitie­s in the Tri- County Water District.

OHIO Milford Township: A medical helicopter responding to the scene of a fatal accident crashed early Tuesday when it hit power lines, but no one on board the aircraft was seriously injured, authoritie­s said.

OKLAHOMA Norman: A couple has been charged in the death of a woman whose body was found last year wrapped in plastic in the basement of a home.

OREGON Portland: Gov. Kate Brown declared a state of emergency across much of the state, warning the extreme temperatur­es might cause utility outages and transporta­tion disruption­s.

PENNSYLVAN­IA Baden: Punk’s Ice Cream Shoppe has been forced to temporaril­y close after a car crashed into the building Sunday night.

RHODE ISLAND East Providence: The ACLU of Rhode Island said it is concerned a system recording audio and video in the City Clerk’s office might be illegally capturing conversati­ons between visitors in the room.

SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia: South Carolina can continue enforcing its six- week abortion ban after a judge denied a request to temporaril­y block it amid a legal fight that is now headed to the state Supreme Court.

SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: An animal rights organizati­on filed a complaint with the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e asking for an investigat­ion into a Sanford Research scientist.

TENNESSEE Memphis: The Memphis district of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers has a new commander for the second time in about a month.

TEXAS Balch Springs: A grass fire apparently sparked on the shoulder of a freeway swept about 300 yards across tinder- dry open field to a suburban Dallas subdivisio­n Monday, burning through wooden fences and torching a row of at least eight homes on the subdivisio­n’s edge.

UTAH St. George: Utah reported far fewer coronaviru­s cases in the week ending Sunday, adding 6,870 new cases. That’s down 11.8% from the previous week’s total of 7,789.

VERMONT Burlington: Federal prosecutor­s said a man charged with killing his mother at sea in 2016 in a plot to inherit millions should remain behind bars pending trial because he poses a flight risk and danger to others.

VIRGINIA Richmond: The state police has temporaril­y reduced the operating hours for its Med- Flight helicopter service in central and southwest Virginia because of a shortage of pilots.

WASHINGTON Royal City: A Moses Lake woman drowned Sunday trying to rescue a dog in a canal, according to the Grant County Sheriff ’ s Office.

WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: The state Division of Motor Vehicles is now able to process some services that have been affected by a system mainframe outage.

WISCONSIN Madison: Former President Donald Trump plans to visit Wisconsin on Aug. 5 to campaign for his endorsed candidate for governor, Tim Michels – an announceme­nt made just two days after Michels said he wouldn’t prioritize a key piece of Trumps’ agenda: to decertify the 2020 presidenti­al election results.

WYOMING Cheyenne: A lawsuit filed Monday by a Casper women’s health clinic and others seeks to block Wyoming’s new abortion ban just before it’s scheduled to take effect.

 ?? MEGAN MENDOZA/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? “We consider fat a part of human body diversity,” says Tigress Osborn, chair of the nonprofit National Associatio­n to Advance Fat Acceptance.
MEGAN MENDOZA/ USA TODAY NETWORK “We consider fat a part of human body diversity,” says Tigress Osborn, chair of the nonprofit National Associatio­n to Advance Fat Acceptance.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Many studies that link health problems to excess weight don’t adequately consider other possible causes of poor health, says Ragen Chastain, an advocate, researcher, speaker and author. She adds that people with good intentions “have been duped.”
PROVIDED Many studies that link health problems to excess weight don’t adequately consider other possible causes of poor health, says Ragen Chastain, an advocate, researcher, speaker and author. She adds that people with good intentions “have been duped.”
 ?? ?? Gaesser
Gaesser

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