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GoldenGod's Journal


GoldenGod's Journal

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2 entries this month
 

I will stand a beacon of light against you

08:55 Jun 24 2013
Times Read: 599


Because you don't scare me.


COMMENTS

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NellMorgan
NellMorgan
16:54 Jun 24 2013

You go go girl





 

About time people stopped tiptoeing around this issue because it might hurt someone's feelings.

15:18 Jun 20 2013
Times Read: 650






The American Medical Assn. voted Tuesday to classify obesity as a disease, a decision that should prompt doctors to get more aggressive about helping patients maintain a healthy weight.



AMA to offices: Don't make workers sit all day!



Soda size cap cuts calories most in kids, the overweight, study says



Belviq, the new miracle diet drug? Fat chance.



Most public elementary schools don't regulate access to junk food



Obese patients may trust diet advice more from heavy doctors

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By Melissa Healy and Anna Gorman, Los Angeles Times

June 18, 2013, 9:43 p.m.

The American Medical Assn. voted Tuesday to declare obesity a disease, a move that effectively defines 78 million American adults and 12 million children as having a medical condition requiring treatment.



The nation's leading physicians organization took the vote after debating whether the action would do more to help affected patients get useful treatment or would further stigmatize a condition with many causes and few easy fixes.



In the end, members of the AMA's House of Delegates rejected cautionary advice from their own experts and extended the new status to a condition that affects more than one-third of adults and 17% of children in the United States.



"Recognizing obesity as a disease will help change the way the medical community tackles this complex issue that affects approximately 1 in 3 Americans," said Dr. Patrice Harris, an AMA board member.



Tuesday's vote is certain to step up pressure on health insurance companies to reimburse physicians for the time-consuming task of discussing obesity's health risks with patients whose body mass index exceeds 30. It should also encourage doctors to direct these patients to weight-loss programs and to monitor their often-fitful progress.



The federally funded Medicare program, which insures an estimated 13 million obese Americans who are over 65 or disabled, already covers the costs of "intensive behavioral therapy" for obese patients, as well as bariatric surgery for those with additional health conditions. But coverage for such obesity treatments has been uneven among private insurers.



Insurers who are members of the California Assn. of Health Plans cover many services to treat medical conditions associated with obesity, including bariatric surgery and diabetes, said President and Chief Executive Patrick Johnston.



The AMA's decision essentially makes diagnosis and treatment of obesity a physician's professional obligation. As such, it should encourage primary care physicians to get over their discomfort about raising weight concerns with obese patients. Studies have found that more than half of obese patients have never been told by a medical professional they need to lose weight — a result not only of some doctors' reluctance to offend but of their unwillingness to open a lengthy consultation for which they might not be reimbursed.



Past AMA documents have referred to obesity as an "urgent chronic condition," a "major health concern" and a "complex disorder." The vote now lifts obesity above the status of a health condition, disorder or marker for heightened risk of disease — as high cholesterol is for heart disease, for instance.



"As things stand now, primary care physicians tend to look at obesity as a behavior problem," said Dr. Rexford Ahima of University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism. "This will force primary care physicians to address it, even if we don't have a cure for it."



The new designation follows a steep 30-year climb in Americans' weight — and growing public concern over the resulting tidal wave of expensive health problems. Treatment of such obesity-related illnesses as cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes and certain cancers drives up the nation's medical bill by more than $150 billion a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.



Projected increases in the obesity rate could boost that figure by an additional $550 billion over the next 20 years, a recent Duke University study concluded.



In laying out the case for and against the redefinition of obesity, the AMA's Council on Science and Public Health argued that more widespread recognition of obesity as a disease "could result in greater investments by government and the private sector to develop and reimburse obesity treatments."



The Food and Drug Administration, which has approved just two new prescription weight-loss medications since 1999, would probably face increased pressure to approve new obesity drugs, spurring new drug development and more widespread prescribing by physicians, the council noted.



"The greater urgency a disease label confers" also might boost support for obesity-prevention programs such as physical education initiatives and reforms to school lunch, the council added. In addition, it speculated that "employers may be required to cover obesity treatments for their employees and may be less able to discriminate on the basis of body weight."



But the council also said that making obesity a disease could deepen the stigma attached to being overweight and doom some patients to endless nagging — even if they were otherwise healthy or had lost enough weight to improve their health.



It might also shift the nation's focus too much toward expensive drug and surgical treatments and away from measures to encourage healthy diets and regular exercise, the council wrote in a background memo for AMA members.



Dr. Daniel H. Bessesen, an endocrinologist and obesity expert at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, called the AMA's shift "a double-edged sword." Though the semantic change may reflect "a growing awareness that obesity is not someone's fault," he worried that "the term disease is stigmatizing, and people who are obese don't need more stigmatizing."

COMMENTS

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GoldenGod
GoldenGod
15:35 Jun 20 2013

This is meant to let people know that you can get medical help for this. If you are offended by this that is not my problem. I am trying to let you all know that doctors will help you now! So (Lullaby) if you want to assume I am making a dig at you and give me negative honor for it that is your issue. You aren't even in America so it doesn't apply to you.





LordFangor
LordFangor
16:28 Jun 20 2013

People would be better off if they simply went for a walk everyday.





NellMorgan
NellMorgan
16:28 Jun 20 2013

I really wish something like this was implemented in the UK. I was a big girl in my 20s and worried about the impact of this to my heart and other medical issues. I had to battle obesity on my own. No one should ever feel ashamed to get help. Manged to loose the weight alone, and it was hell.



 photo fatgothgirl_zpsc84a6578.jpg





NellMorgan
NellMorgan
16:29 Jun 20 2013

^^^^^Yes folks I was a big girl as proved above.





GoldenGod
GoldenGod
16:32 Jun 20 2013

I agree lord fangor but some have trouble, for whatever reason.



This has nothing to do with what you look like but may I say Nells you still looked good. This is about health.








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