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Obesity management: at the forefront against disease stigma and therapeutic inertia
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- SPRINGER, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Obesity is a complex chronic relapsing disease, resulting from the interaction between multiple environmental, genetic and epigenetic causes, and supported by changes in the neuroendocrine mechanisms regulating energy balance and body weight. Adipose tissue dysfunction contributes to obesity-related complications. However, the prevalent narrative about the causes and mechanisms of obesity remains a much more simplistic one, based on the false assumption that individuals can fully control their body weight through appropriate behavioural choices. According to this narrative, obesity is simply reversible “persuading” the patient to follow healthier and more virtuous individual behaviours (moral judgement). This persistent narrative forms the deep root of the stigmatisation of people with obesity at the individual level and creates a clear discrepancy on how obesity prevention and cure are designed in comparison with the case of other non-communicable chronic diseases (clinical stigma). The promotion of systemic preventive measures against obesity is not supported at a political and social level by the persistence of a narrative of obesity as the simple consequence of individual failures and lack of willpower. The simplistic narrative of obesity as a self-imposed condition with an easy way-out (“eat less and move more”) creates a clear discrepancy on how obesity is managed by health care systems in comparison with other NCDs. The over-estimation of the efficacy of therapeutic intervention solely based on patients education and lifestyle modification is responsible of therapeutic inertia in health care professionals and in clinical guidelines, limiting or delaying the adoption of more effective therapeutic strategies, like anti-obesity medications and bariatric surgery. In conclusion, the persistence of a narrative describing obesity as a self-induced easily reversible condition has profound consequences on how obesity prevention and management are build, including the design and implementation of obesity management guidelines and a tendency to therapeutic inertia.Level of evidence: No level of evidence.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Social Stigma
Judgement
Bariatric Surgery
Stigma (botany)
Therapeutic inertia
Settore MED/09
030209 endocrinology & metabolism
Disease
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Intervention (counseling)
Health care
medicine
Humans
Narrative
030212 general & internal medicine
Obesity
Psychiatry
Life Style
business.industry
Body Weight
Evidence-based medicine
medicine.disease
Psychiatry and Mental health
Clinical Psychology
Stigma
Chronic diseases
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5903fc296669ba709552143e807f7eee