Question about Health and Weight
Jun. 3rd, 2018 04:43 pmWhy does the medical establishment use a disease model for obesity? How is this beneficial? They don't do this for other symptoms which have multiple possible causes. If you see your doctor because you are short of breath, they don't tell you to breathe better. They look at heart health, lung function, possible neuromuscular disorders, medications, and maybe even psychological issues. There are a lot of reasons that one might be short of breath. They might even put you on oxygen if your blood oxygen levels are low while they try to figure out the exact cause.
How is being overweight different? Why do we treat obesity as if it were the disease, and not the symptom? There are a lot of reasons one might be carrying more weight than the doctors prefer. But lifestyle choices is only one of them, and even there, those choices are often intertwined with other issues like joint pain and time management problems and poverty. But by using a disease model when looking at obesity, it seems like they are getting their causality wrong a lot of the time. People in pain move less, which increases weight, which makes it harder to move, which increases weight. But seems like you want to tackle the pain, first.
I also want to bang my head against a wall every time someone says "obesity epidemic." To the best of our current knowledge, obesity is not contagious. So using an epidemic model is just nuts. It seems like this impairs communication, not improves it.
I think that I would be much more willing to talk about my current weight with my doctor if I had a feeling that we weren't going to be scolding me, or recommending drastic solutions like a gastric bypass, and instead were looking at it as a symptom with an underlying cause. But "you weigh too much" is, um, not helpful? It's not new information.
How is being overweight different? Why do we treat obesity as if it were the disease, and not the symptom? There are a lot of reasons one might be carrying more weight than the doctors prefer. But lifestyle choices is only one of them, and even there, those choices are often intertwined with other issues like joint pain and time management problems and poverty. But by using a disease model when looking at obesity, it seems like they are getting their causality wrong a lot of the time. People in pain move less, which increases weight, which makes it harder to move, which increases weight. But seems like you want to tackle the pain, first.
I also want to bang my head against a wall every time someone says "obesity epidemic." To the best of our current knowledge, obesity is not contagious. So using an epidemic model is just nuts. It seems like this impairs communication, not improves it.
I think that I would be much more willing to talk about my current weight with my doctor if I had a feeling that we weren't going to be scolding me, or recommending drastic solutions like a gastric bypass, and instead were looking at it as a symptom with an underlying cause. But "you weigh too much" is, um, not helpful? It's not new information.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 02:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 02:34 am (UTC)Parts of the medical profession seem to be coming around a little bit. My last couple of doctors have discussed weight only in terms of whether losing it would improve certain conditions -- hypertension, which it won't because I already tried that and it made no difference at all; and diabetes, which it will because it has. But they don't address it otherwise. Then again, I haven't asked them to, either.
And I did have one doctor who toed the HCMC line of not harassing people about their weight unless it was really necessary; but she obviously didn't like not being able to harass me about it. So it's hard to say, as you said, how your doctor would react. Do you think saying that you don't want a weight loss plan since they don't work over time for 95% of people, but you'd like to know if anything in particular is going on, would work? Is that what you want to know?
P.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 03:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 03:07 am (UTC)I really am curious, though, why the professionals have decided to use a disease model. That's a choice. So, what drives that choice? What are they trying to accomplish? I understand why professionals use a disease model for mental disorders and for addiction, and it has some clear benefits (as well as some drawbacks). But I am struggling to find any benefits to that choice in regards to obesity.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 03:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 05:22 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 06:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 06:11 pm (UTC)I'm low-end obese at 5'6" 200 lbs, the charts dictate that I should be 150 lbs to not be officially obese. I haven't weighed that since early high school. I'm down 15 lbs since my wife and I married 13 years ago and she's concerned about that because I haven't done anything specific except stopped eating out for lunch even though it's been gradual.
Epidemic is definitely not the right classification. It would be lovely to have our Chubster In Chief, who feasts on Big Macs, to be labeled as obese by a hard-nosed Navy doctor, but that'll never happen.
excess weight is a symptom
Date: 2018-06-04 07:46 pm (UTC)so much of it is biochemistry.
one doctor could tell by a guys hands
and over all bigness
that he had a pituitary tumor
that was pushing the body to grow.
but not every one has tumors-
but it can be a family trait.
the thyroid working over time or not working.
the adrenals going nuts.
the bodies in ability to use insulin- insulin intolerance
all of these will drive the human
to hold on to fluid,
make fat cells inflate or reproduce rapidly.
creating fibroids in an attempt to repair
damage you don't even know you have
and make things worse bu not stopping.
they will cause the inactivity and odd diet choices.
when a person feels better
they will move and become active
and will eat foods that are better for that activity.
just looking at the numbers
and attacking a person?
and saying you must eat ... et yadada
the menu they have memorized
not asking what is your diet
what is your activity level
your emotional state
is bogus
there needs to be a set of tests to find out
what organs need help to undo the missed balance.
that part fo medicine needs a serious overhaul.
I remember when mom's knee was messed up
the first time- it never was fixed- she slowed down
and the you must stop eating command was planted
the knee only got worse. needed replacement.
the inactivity did not help it heal.
the harassment over diet only dug at her self esteem
after the stroke she needed to eat more
to repair her affected tissues.
but because of the programming and fatigue she ate even less
she was proud she lost 5 pound a week
cumulatively it was part of what killed her.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:06 pm (UTC)The one report I saw was very hesitant. The person received a fecal transplant from a relative, and I can't remember which way it went, but the recipient either became obese, or lost weight, and their weight became similar to their donor. I think it was gaining weight, maybe? So they thought maybe something about the gut bacteria affected weight? Very, very tentative.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:21 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-04 09:23 pm (UTC)P.