Commentary: Renaming obesity won’t fix weight stigma overnight

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There is no universal consensus on whether obesity is a disease, but there is value in moving the focus away from body size, say these health researchers.

We study the stigma that surrounds obesity - around the time of pregnancy, among health professionals and health students, and in public health more widely. Here’s what’s really needed to reduce weight stigma.

People in larger bodies experience discrimination in many areas, including in the workplace, intimate and family relationships, education, health care and the media. In recent weeks, European researchers have renamed non-alcoholic fatty liver disease “metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease”. This occurred after up to 66 per cent of health-care professionals surveyed felt the terms “non-alcoholic” and “fatty” to be stigmatising.

However, BMI alone is not enough to accurately summarise someone’s health. It does not account for muscle mass and does not provide information about the distribution of body weight or adipose tissue . A high BMI can occur without biological indicators of poor health.

Source: Healthcare Press (healthcarepress.net)

 

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