This stigma of weight has become a global health problem, studies say

What is the only thing that even many health experts are guilty? Fat.


What is the only thing that even many health experts are guilty? Fat.

When you walk on the doctor's office, a health professional will probably evaluate your weight based on your body mass index (BMI). If you are not an athlete or naturally muscular, you can be considered asoverweight or obese By this metric, even if you eat healthy and work all the time.

If you are a member of the FAT, you feel supported by your doctor? Do you feel accepted by colleagues at work? What about your family and friends? According to new research, the majority of overweight adults have grown fat - and their experiences with stigma have had a negative effect on not only self-esteem, but also their desire to seek assistance on health care.

The stigma of the weight of the impact has on the lives of people

More than half of the members of nearly 14,000 WW (formerly Weight Watchers) interviewed between May and 2020, say they had had fats of family, friends, doctors, classmates and even colleagues. In addition, GRAS sorrow is not just a problem in the United States, this includes adults living in Australia, Canada, France, Germany and the United Kingdom.

"Stigma is an enemy to health", "Rebecca Puhl, principal leader of two new studies on the subject and the Deputy Director of the RUDD Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut, saidCNN Health. "And just like mental health, weight stigmatization is a legitimate public health issue and we need to legitimize it so that it has not been done yet."

The causes of obesity are extremely complex and they are often outside a person's control. According to the Puhl, the diet and the exercise are only part of the equation - not the entire photo.

"We have certainly created a society that facilitates obesity, with a focus on fast and highly processed foods and a lack of physical activity," said Puhl. "And we do not know all the other pieces of the puzzle such as genetics, the environment, biology, agriculture, food prices, food deserts and accessibility."

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Unfortunately, weight-related stigma started at a very young age for many people and members of their own households. In one of the studies, which has been published in theInternational Journal of ObesityBetween 76% and 88% of respondents had a need for a bodybuilding mainly during childhood or adolescence of a parent, a front brother or other family members. Between 71% and 81% of survey participants also stated that they were intimidated or tasted by classmates at school for their weight.

In adulthood, between 54% and 62% of respondents said that employees had greases that damaged them in the workplace. Even friends tend to express their contribution to weight, with 49% to 66% of respondents saying that they have experienced negative comments.

Health professionals also play a role in fat

In a second study, published in the newspaperPlos a, Puhl and his colleagues used the same dataset to see if the participants were also judged by their doctors. They found that between 63% and 74% of respondents across the six countries felt dilapidated due to their weight during the doctor's office.

"They would get less frequent balance sheets with the doctor," said Puhl. "They were more likely to see that their doctors deem them negatively on their weight and that their doctor had less respect for them and did not listen to their needs."

Just like any global health problem, Stigma will not be eliminated during the night. Many changes need to be applied at home, including the development of the number conversation on a scale.

In order to adopt a real change, we have to look beyond the grease at home and in the classroom. Federal and state governments should play a role in combating stigma, according to Puhl. For more, be sure to checkMost American children are deficient in these four major nutrients, says a new study .


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