Yeah, it’s been a while since I’ve written on here. Lots of things to process and projects begun (but, TBD if they will be finished). When I began my time here at the medical center, I’m almost certain I didn’t think I would become disillusioned by health care’s efforts to “address” obesity. In fact I probably never thought about the obesity “crisis” before this job. Now that’s pretty much all I do.
As I’ve written about before, the obesity rhetoric – particularly on Mississippi – is loud and wild and abundant. The rhetoric that’s heard is all based on the basically the same premise, that consuming an excess of calories compared to those you spend (like money, right?) will lead to a gain (but a bad gain). And the converse is true – those who are seen as holding excess weight surely got that way because of their caloric gluttony.
The doctors feel like it’s their job to fix these people. Their job is to cure bodies. I attended a small conference on obesity, with interested GI specialists and administrators and physicians who are so frustrated with obesity and like the money it costs taxpayers. Insert comic relief with a laugh on this lazy culture in the US we’ve created:
<can’t say how many presentations I’ve seen with this image>
Or what about how gross fat bodies are? Let’s look at images of the failing fatty heart, diagrams of that visceral body fat, and hear about weight-loss regimens that externally drain your stomach with a tube. I just kept looking around at the shaking heads, the heads of clinicians frustrated and tired with noncompliant patients, the fat bodies, the money, the disease, the tired. They’re just tired.
What if the clinicians can’t do anything about obesity? And really, what if they’re not supposed to? Most diet/exercise routines don’t work to help people shed weight, particularly the people most overweight. Actually, more evidence shows that once people reach a certain weight, their metabolism slows dramatically, often preventing further weight loss. Physicians don’t know how to talk about obesity with their patients anyway, and have been shown to have stigma against people who are considered overweight.
Physicians want to change habits. They want people to do what they say: “doctor’s orders.” And this is crucial in most health care situations. But I’m not so sure that it’s obesity they can also get involved in – maybe yes for some individuals, but not for changing populations.
Food tends to be deemed the culprit for the obesity epidemic we see, and the related chronic conditions like type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Really, it’s gotten to the point that this narrative is used (overused) all the time. We’re obsessed with food. It’s perhaps understandable that the narrative began with this, as prescriptive behavior change: drink less soda, cut out trans-fat, processed food; be sure to exercise, drink lots of water; eat only a handful of nuts. Eat small meals 5 times a day. Eat eggs (1 or 2?), eat only whole wheat bread (ok no bread), but avoid the high fructose corn syrup in the bread. Eat quinoa and drink kombucha and only pasture-raised certified beef, but anything else that isn’t easily identifiable, avoid. Avoid limit splurge cheat treat yourself, cut it out, be mindful balance, cleanse nurture…
In the early and mid-2000s we became increasingly aware that not everyone ate the same as each other. The more progressives noticed that more deprived areas didn’t have access to the same quality foods as those who lived in wealthier neighborhoods. These deprived areas also happen to have higher rates of hypertension, diabetes, and obesity. Diet quickly became considered as not only the most modifiable risk factor, but also the #1 reason for the obesity epidemic. We finally started recognizing that there are places with limited access to fresh, good quality produce and other staples – food deserts.
From the series, Weight of the Nation
But what else do deprived areas often have?
- Crime
- Poorly-funded schools
- Lack of access to reliable credit and banking
- Dearth of jobs
- Proximity to environmental hazards
And what else might people with lower incomes have?
- Unreliable electricity and clean, safe water, which makes food storage and preparation difficult (if not impossible)
- Overcrowded housing or housing in need of repair, which might have pest and mold control issues
- Unpredictable or inflexible employment that limits time and energy often needed for engaging in extracurricular *health* behaviors
- Dependents, younger and older, that require extra care
These all matter, yes?
Yet, I continue to hear that the answer lies in teaching people about proper nutrition and exercise, even though we know that education (and sometimes even access) cannot do it alone. There have to be conducive, representative, agency-enhancing environments and routines for individuals to comfortably, want to adopt. Long-term sustainable change requires organic change – through changing norms and values, not simply laws and clinical dictations directed toward individuals. And, these norms of health and wellness may not look the same for different groups of people – and we shouldn’t be afraid of that. Maintaining a healthy lifestyle might not get to include extensive meal prep, it might not include daily selfies at the gym, it may not be meticulous or regimented. Given the regular stresses of life, it might still include a rush to get out of the house each morning and an inability to keep up with all the daily news or trends. It might require not doing it all. Is it still *healthy*?
With all this discourse, about judging people’s food consumption and even food availability as a reflection of human character and worth, we run the risk of denying agency of the people, who are often depicted as wholly subject to their surrounding environments. Julie Guthman (2011) calls out food writer Michael Pollan (2006) for explicitly stating this narrative of the dubious consumer: “When food is abundant and cheap, people will eat more of it and get fat.” And simultaneously we isolate the narrative about obesity to one simply on food, eliminating the possibility for social structural imbalances leading to a propensity to chronic disease.
What I’m coming to learn is that yes, individual diet and exercise are the *most* modifiable risk factors -> because they are the least politically disruptive, and they are easiest to quantify.
Obesity and chronic disease are symptoms of larger problems. In the short run, getting some to change their behaviors might work for a few. But when we’re close to 40%, and among some closer to 50% prevalence of obesity and running high risk for serious conditions like diabetes, bigger, looser policy changes are needed for the bigger change.
And so, I’ve come almost full circle here. At LSE, frustrated by economics, now disillusioned by public health. Just ready to start talking different, start reading a different approach to health. My hope is actually that economics, or sociology, might have some answers. But I’m not convinced it’s medicine, and I don’t think it should have to be.
Works Cited
Guthman, Julie. 2011. Weighing In: Obesity, Food Justice, and the Limits of Capitalism.
Pollan, Michael. 2006. The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals.New York: Penguin.
Featured image from: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/sep/11/fat-shaming-slim-sanctimonious-cause-obesity-crisis.