Fat City article - Why obesity is not your doctor’s problem
gmallan
Posts: 2,099 Member
Incredibly powerful article by Karen Hitchcock an Australian doctor and writer on the obesity epidemic. If this doesn't make you want to lose weight then nothing will.
http://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2013/march/1361848247/karen-hitchcock/fat-city
The choice is in your hands. Are you going to eat it?
http://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2013/march/1361848247/karen-hitchcock/fat-city
The choice is in your hands. Are you going to eat it?
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Replies
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This was an extremely interesting article. Thank you for posting.0
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This was an extremely interesting article. Thank you for posting.
No worries, I started reading it and just couldn't stop. I hadn't seen it floating around the forums and just had to share0 -
Wow, what a great and thought-provoking article.
Thanks for sharing!0 -
Thanks for posting. That blew my mind at least 3 times!0
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Thanks, I enjoyed that.
The Monthly is well worth subscribing to IMO.0 -
who else googled "what i ate when i was fat"?
i should just print this and hang it on my fridge.0 -
bump0
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Wow, what an impressive article.
Thanks for posting.0 -
Thank you! It was very interesting.0
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who else googled "what i ate when i was fat"?
i should just print this and hang it on my fridge.
I did!0 -
Thanks for sharing! A little long but definitely worth reading.
From the article: "Why not plaster packets of chips and chocolate with full-colour photographs of the rot that grows under an apron of fat, or a gangrenous foot caused by diabetes? ... Any public-health campaign to curb obesity would need to be graphic, to make real the unpleasant consequences of pleasurable excess eating." Sounds like a great idea to me. I just grossed myself out looking at photos of gangrene, clogged arteries, etc. and now I feel (at least temporarily) disgusted by junk food.0 -
Yes, she has limits as a doctor. Absolutely, social policy would help, and she poo poos it too quickly. Having an honest conversation about the causes of obesity within the public sphere would increase acceptance of policies. If this article furthers that, that's a good thing I guess, but there's a level of aggression in there - and yeah, disgust - that verges on cruelty. I get that it's probably because she's fed up, but still. If she really understood the social determinants of health, she couldn't have written that piece.0
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Yes, she has limits as a doctor. Absolutely, social policy would help, and she poo poos it too quickly. Having an honest conversation about the causes of obesity within the public sphere would increase acceptance of policies. If this article furthers that, that's a good thing I guess, but there's a level of aggression in there - and yeah, disgust - that verges on cruelty. I get that it's probably because she's fed up, but still. If she really understood the social determinants of health, she couldn't have written that piece.
Interesting view. I didn't pick up any level of agression and found the honesty of the article quite refreshing. I think what came through for me was the level of frustration and feeling powerlessness with her inability to be able to help these individuals, their inability to help themselves and the society's failure to do anything effective to combat the problem. A Doctor's role in treating obesity-related diseases is such a bandaid solution to what is (in theory only as the article points out) a simple problem, over consumption.0 -
What I got from the article was 'doctors can't fix this. It's up to YOU'.
Which sounds reasonable enough.0 -
Yes, she has limits as a doctor. Absolutely, social policy would help, and she poo poos it too quickly. Having an honest conversation about the causes of obesity within the public sphere would increase acceptance of policies. If this article furthers that, that's a good thing I guess, but there's a level of aggression in there - and yeah, disgust - that verges on cruelty. I get that it's probably because she's fed up, but still. If she really understood the social determinants of health, she couldn't have written that piece.
Sounds like you just read the first couple of paragraphs and maybe the last one.
Read the whole thing.0 -
saving for later.0
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Very thought provoking! I had a discussion with my husband over the key points. It really puts things into perspective and makes you think.What I got from the article was 'doctors can't fix this. It's up to YOU'.
Which sounds reasonable enough.
I took that from the article too.0 -
In to read tonight0
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What a thought provoking article. Thanks for sharing. I tried to go back to work after reading half, but I couldn't stop.0
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Wow thank u! I definitely needed that wake up call!0
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It makes me want to go running!0
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Thanks for sharing! A little long but definitely worth reading.
From the article: "Why not plaster packets of chips and chocolate with full-colour photographs of the rot that grows under an apron of fat, or a gangrenous foot caused by diabetes? ... Any public-health campaign to curb obesity would need to be graphic, to make real the unpleasant consequences of pleasurable excess eating." Sounds like a great idea to me. I just grossed myself out looking at photos of gangrene, clogged arteries, etc. and now I feel (at least temporarily) disgusted by junk food.
Great Article. Yes a bit long but still had to read it.
Agree on her statements of - "Any public-health campaign to curb obesity would need to be graphic, to make real the unpleasant consequences of pleasurable excess eating." - I think it is not a bad idea.
In the US, we need to quit subsidizing so much food that is used to make the Junk Food. I think the subsidies make the junk food cheaper hence why we eat more of it. Subsidize the Healthier choices.. I like the idea of making Junk Food more expensive. Yes, sucks for the companies who make it, but maybe they should consider getting into a different kind of business. We can still enjoy chips, a cookie, or soda but just in moderation.
Worth the read on this article..0 -
Thank you for posting this, it was very enlightening0
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Very interesting read.0
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Thanks for sharing! A little long but definitely worth reading.
From the article: "Why not plaster packets of chips and chocolate with full-colour photographs of the rot that grows under an apron of fat, or a gangrenous foot caused by diabetes? ... Any public-health campaign to curb obesity would need to be graphic, to make real the unpleasant consequences of pleasurable excess eating." Sounds like a great idea to me. I just grossed myself out looking at photos of gangrene, clogged arteries, etc. and now I feel (at least temporarily) disgusted by junk food.
Great Article. Yes a bit long but still had to read it.
Agree on her statements of - "Any public-health campaign to curb obesity would need to be graphic, to make real the unpleasant consequences of pleasurable excess eating." - I think it is not a bad idea.
In the US, we need to quit subsidizing so much food that is used to make the Junk Food. I think the subsidies make the junk food cheaper hence why we eat more of it. Subsidize the Healthier choices.. I like the idea of making Junk Food more expensive. Yes, sucks for the companies who make it, but maybe they should consider getting into a different kind of business. We can still enjoy chips, a cookie, or soda but just in moderation.
Worth the read on this article..
In that case, we need to make a policy change to stop subsidizing things like corn which in turn makes junk food so cheap. Blaming the public for eating cheap junky food when we deliberately make it so is just insane.0 -
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Yes, she has limits as a doctor. Absolutely, social policy would help, and she poo poos it too quickly. Having an honest conversation about the causes of obesity within the public sphere would increase acceptance of policies. If this article furthers that, that's a good thing I guess, but there's a level of aggression in there - and yeah, disgust - that verges on cruelty. I get that it's probably because she's fed up, but still. If she really understood the social determinants of health, she couldn't have written that piece.
Interesting view. I didn't pick up any level of agression and found the honesty of the article quite refreshing. I think what came through for me was the level of frustration and feeling powerlessness with her inability to be able to help these individuals, their inability to help themselves and the society's failure to do anything effective to combat the problem. A Doctor's role in treating obesity-related diseases is such a bandaid solution to what is (in theory only as the article points out) a simple problem, over consumption.
Yeah, I didn't pick up on any aggression either. But I did pick up on that sense of helplessness and frustration. How do you explain something very important to people who don't listen or who don't want to take responsibility for their actions? Especially when it's such a sensitive topic like body weight?0 -
This article is so terribly depressing.
I feel like after years of enjoying food to get to this state I must now give it up and be a hermit. I feel doomed to years, even a lifetime of denial, hunger, and lack of satisfaction.0 -
I also picked up on some sinister undertones, perhaps some judgement there or condescension, but at the same time, I am really glad I read this article. I am pregnant and so I am thinking about my future child, wondering how I can equip him to make the best health decisions in a society that's not geared toward health.
I think it will take some blunt, brutal honesty--the kind shown in this article-- to bring about real change.0 -
Bump0
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