Posts Tagged ‘weight bias’

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Absurd Face, illustration by Fazoffic

The Dumbest Headline of the Year About Obesity

January 10, 2026

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“People who come off slimming jabs regain weight four times faster than dieters.” The year is young, but already we have this contender for the dumbest headline of the year about obesity. It is helpful only as a reminder of how pervasive the implicit bias about obesity and its treatment is. Slimming Jabs? The headline […]

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Making a Choice: Perpetuate or Challenge Obesity Stigma

Making a Choice: Perpetuate or Challenge Obesity Stigma

January 5, 2026

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

This is an uncomfortable truth. Whether health professionals think about it or not in work that touches on obesity, they are making a choice: Are they perpetuating or challenging obesity stigma?

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Stolen Money, photograph by Colin Brown

Profiteering and the Criminal Trade in Bogus Obesity Medicines

December 15, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

Business is apparently booming in the criminal trade for bogus obesity medicines. The Times (London) reports that criminals are selling dangerous weight-loss jabs on social media and in gyms. They write that: “Pharmaceutical bosses have issued a stark warning about medicines such as Mounjaro sold online without safety controls as gangs branch out from hard […]

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Schönbrunn Garden Labyrinth, photograph by Andrea Schaufler

Mapping Out Directions for Weight Bias Research

December 13, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

The International Journal of Obesity has published a map for future directions in weight bias research. The quality and global diversity of thinking that went into the summit which produced this roadmap is exceptional. The source of this thinking was the International Weight Bias Summit last year in Montreal at Concordia University. Support for the […]

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A Thin Bright Line in Earth’s Atmosphere, International Space Station photograph by NASA

A Bright Line Between Health Promotion and Obesity Prevention

December 11, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Shifting paradigms is difficult, but that does not mean we can’t try. Recently, I have been continuing the discussion that I started to think about in 2012 when I started my PhD. It is all about drawing a bright line between health promotion and obesity prevention. We need to be sure to be clear about […]

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Tulane University Medical School, photograph by Infrogmation of New Orleans

Stigmatizing Obesity in Medical Schools

November 13, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

It would be odd to think that medical schools would stigmatize the most prevalent chronic disease that medical students will encounter. But stigmatizing obesity in medical schools is all too common, even today. Kofi Essel and colleagues published a study of the obesity bias observed by third year medical students at George Washington University School […]

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The Central Role for Persons Living with Obesity, photograph of Ted Kyle presenting at XXII Curso de Obesidad by Emma Manzanera

The Emergence of a Central Role for Persons with Obesity

October 25, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

In two decades of advocacy for persons living with obesity, we have found great satisfaction in seeing a central role emerge for the lived experience of these people. But it is especially inspiring to see it spread across many different countries with many different health systems. We saw this up close yesterday as a keynote […]

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President Trump Welcomes the Clemson Tigers, official White House photograph by Joyce N. Boghosian

A Festival of Fat Shaming in Political News This Week

October 3, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

“The Hegseth hypocrisy: Fat-shaming top generals in land of McDonald Trump.” That headline delivers the essence of fat shaming in the week’s political news. It started with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and quickly spread to detractors of the administration. Hegseth explained that he can’t stand the sight of fat people in the military: “Frankly, it’s […]

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Pointing the Finger, illustration from Gemini AI image generation

More Respect and Less Finger Pointing in Primary Obesity Care

August 31, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Empathetic, respectful care sounds like a reasonable expectation for a primary care visit. New research, conducted by the Obesity Action Coalition, Drexel University, the ABOM Foundation, and Thoughtform, shows the way to take this from an aspiration to reality. Simply stated, persons living with obesity want more respect and less finger pointing in primary obesity […]

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Fit for TV, publicity photo courtesy of Netflix

Learning from 18 Seasons of Exploitation on the Biggest Loser

August 26, 2025

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

In the top ranks of the most watched shows on Netflix now is a documentary describing 18 seasons of exploitation on The Biggest Loser. For the folks who ran the original show, it generated hundreds of millions (if not billions) of dollars in revenue. For the folks who opened themselves up to exploitation on the […]

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