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Should obesity be treated like cancer?

WOULD you consult with a person without qualifications if you had cancer? Why is it any different if you have obesity? It shouldn’t be, argues a Sydney doctor. He added that the pop-up “wellness” industry with unqualified bloggers were hurting people.

WOULD you consult with a person without qualifications if you had cancer? Why is it any different if you have obesity? It shouldn’t be.

Obesity is a serious problem, a disease, and should be treated accordingly. It’s the greatest policy challenge of our time — two in three people are now overweight or have obesity.

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Parallel to this exponential growth in the obesity epidemic is the pop-up “wellness” industry with an explosion of unqualified personnel and entrepreneurs specifically cashing in on the weight loss industry — worth an eye-watering $100 billion dollars.

Kayla Itsines showing off her fit body and designer fitness wear. Picture: Instagram
Kayla Itsines showing off her fit body and designer fitness wear. Picture: Instagram

It appears as though everyone has an opinion on what we should be eating these days and how we should lose weight. The absurdness of it all means that some of these people have even completed some form of two-day online certificate or had a lived experience that certifies them as one of the many so-called “experts” in the field.

They might even be a social media sensation, a fitness trainer, a chef or a celebrity. So I guess we should be listening to them, right? Has the world gone mad?!

Ashy Bines in an online video.
Ashy Bines in an online video.

Do people really think that the likes of Kayla Itsines, Jen Selter, Faya Nilsson, Massy Arias, Anna Victoria, Tracy Anderson, Michelle Bridges, Ashy Bines et al, or a pretty, fit girl or ripped guy on Instagram, are going to solve their battle against the bulge?

These are the last people you should be getting advice from.

Obesity needs to be treated seriously and not by those giving advice not qualified to do so. These “influencers”, or pretty people, we follow on Instagram simply don’t know what they are talking about and their advice or programs are not evidence based — it’s all anecdata.

We largely have social media to blame for the boom in the number of “wellness” experts.

Fitness blogger Jen Selter. Picture: Instagram
Fitness blogger Jen Selter. Picture: Instagram

Eighty-five per cent of 15-24 year olds are now active on social media and yet young people are also where the greatest expansion in waistlines are being seen. BUT it’s not just limited to the young — 10 million people check Facebook daily and more than a third of Australians check social media at least five times per day.

What impact does this have on public health?

Some of the better known television celebrities do cop flak from time to time from certain governing industries — such as Pete Evans and his bone broth for babies — but influencers go unregulated.

Social media is for fantasy NOT advice. Pretty girls on Instagram spruiking skinny tea or waist trainers are setting us up for failure every single time by selling nonsense “health” and “lifestyle” programs and promoting an unhealthy body image.

Instagram bodies are not achievable for most people.
Instagram bodies are not achievable for most people.

These “influencers” are unqualified, unregulated and uninterested in anything but personal gain — their only qualification is looking good in a bikini or ripped with their shirt off.

The prevalence and use of social media has meant that we can now look at these “wellness” experts all the time — they are in the palms of our hands 24/7, from all over the world. Their constant message puts doubt in our heads. We look at the mirror every day, convince ourselves that we are fat and them tell ourselves “yeah, maybe I’ll try that diet”.

They create an unhealthy portrayal of what is a healthy body weight.

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BUT we don’t look like these aspirational Instagram stars because we work, we lead a realistic life. We aren’t paid to look pretty or spruik different products online.

Sadly, you are doomed for failure every single time. Not only is their advice unrealistic and unhealthy to follow but your body also prevents you from succeeding, which is why obesity is a disease. And their advice only compounds this issue more.

Our health and weight is too important to be taken care of by anyone other than a qualified professional.
Our health and weight is too important to be taken care of by anyone other than a qualified professional.

Restrictive eating, dieting and an obsession with body image results in a fear of food – a fear that you will eat something that’s not allowed.

Inadvertently, creating a dieting mentality and a cultural obsession with weight loss and body image.

Our body is far smarter than we give it credit for and will always work to protect its “set point” or level of fatness.

Eventually you put the weight back on. But not only do you eventually end up back where you started, you end up in a worse off position because of the damage you impose on your metabolism and the obsession with weight loss and body image that you have developed. Research has clearly supported this and proven that irregular eating and a history of dieting as two of the key factors that actually accelerate getting fatter, rather than preventing it.

The take-home message

Firstly, the government needs to take ownership and start regulating this industry.

As individuals, we need to make better informed health decisions when it comes to our health and body weight. Our health is too important to put in the hands of someone unqualified.

This means we need to stop listening to social media in a field that goes completely unregulated and of which is full of misleading and bad advice.

Long-term weight loss success comes down to a making room for a healthier relationship with food and body image NOT listening to unqualified personnel who don’t know what they are talking about.

How to navigate your way through the field of health and wellness “experts”

1. Look for their qualifications. They should be easy to find on their social media page or website. If you can’t find their qualifications, they won’t have any and therefore you should ignore them.

2. Check what sort of qualifications they have. For example, a two-day online certificate in nutrition doesn’t mean they are qualified in the field and a certificate III or IV in fitness means they are a personal trainer, not an exercise or nutrition specialist.

3. Check their qualification is applicable to their industry or business. A degree in, for example, marketing, journalism or business doesn’t mean they should be advising on health, disease, diet and exercise or weight loss. But then again this is why they are probably doing so well in the business world. Clever isn’t it!

Interval Weight Loss by Dr Nick Fuller.
Interval Weight Loss by Dr Nick Fuller.

Dr Nick Fuller is a leading obesity expert at the University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, and the founder of Interval Weight Loss. Interval Weight Loss is the only scientifically proven way of redefining the weight your body wants to be, to prevent that ever so common weight regain after following a weight loss program. For more information, refer to Interval Weight Loss.

Originally published as Should obesity be treated like cancer?

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/lifestyle/health/should-obesity-be-treated-like-cancer/news-story/8dbedc7875e0aba26b0bc99b0cdf834f