Healthy Diet & Nutrition
Weight Loss

The 5 Worst Myths About Obesity

More than a third of adults in the United States, 35.1 percent, are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Nearly 70 percent are at least overweight, and obesity in adolescents has quadrupled in the past three decades.

ΓÇ£Despite all the attention, an unhealthy amount of body fat remains an insidious problem,ΓÇ¥ says Dr. Eleazar Kadile, who specializes in treating patients with obesity and associated chronic disease.

ΓÇ£Most of us know weΓÇÖre facing a national health crisis, yet diets for millions of Americans continue to be based in heavily processed foods. Obese people often live in perpetual shame, and many others believe they are right to blame the overweight and obese for their problem.ΓÇ¥

Kadile, director of the Center for Integrative Medicine and author of ΓÇ£Stop Dying FatΓÇ¥ (www.kppmd.com), says poor attitudes and lack of understanding contribute significantly to this national crisis, which contributes to our national healthcare difficulties. Here, he debunks five myths about being overweight and obese.

•  “It’s your fault that you’re fat.” Obesity is caused by complex imbalances within a person’s body and his or her environment. Some imbalances are exacerbated by poor dietary choices based on bad dietary information, personal history and psychological patterns. Together, the physiological, psychological, social and environmental causes of the disease of obesity create a predicament that obese people are drawn into and unable to get out of.

ΓÇó Obese people are among the ΓÇ£fat and happy.ΓÇ¥ Large people can be masters at suppressing the indignities they suffer in society. The obese often have to pay first-class fare since cheaper seats for transportation are designed for thinner people. Most advertisements employ beautiful people who are thin, and rarely attractive actors who are larger. National campaigns to battle obesity do not focus on the factors beyond diet and exercise that keep people overweight. Obese patients also spend an average of nearly $1,500 more each year on medical care than other Americans.

ΓÇó Obese and overweight people just need the right diet. ThereΓÇÖs no shortage of diets promoted by beautiful people who promise amazing results. If only overweight people eat what these people eat, then theyΓÇÖll be beautiful, too. But thatΓÇÖs just not true. What and how one eats is just a part of an excessive body mass index level. Other important factors to achieving a healthy BMI include good information regarding oneΓÇÖs health, sustained motivation to change, continuous learning, vigilance and an ability to be extremely honest.

ΓÇó Food is not an obese individualΓÇÖs friend; exercise is. Eat less; exercise more; lose weight ΓÇô those have been the commandments in the religion of weight loss. But most obese people have tried this and it hasnΓÇÖt worked. More than being a source of pleasure, comfort and survival, food is medicine.

ΓÇó Fat people need to ΓÇ£just do itΓÇ¥ ΓÇô lose weight. This attitude is not based in reality; itΓÇÖs an over-simplistic response for a frustrating problem.

ΓÇ£Morbidly obese patients need plenty of preparation,ΓÇ¥ says Kadile. ΓÇ£When a patient comes to me, I go through a rigorous list of questions regarding medical and family history. I ask about eating, sleeping and activity patterns, as well as medical conditions, emotional patterns, stress histories, good times and bad times, etc. I also have them go through an extensive battery of medical tests. ThatΓÇÖs the effective and safe way of doing it.ΓÇ¥

In other words, ΓÇ£just do itΓÇ¥ just doesnΓÇÖt cover it.

Dr. Eleazar Kadile is a complementary physician who specializes in treating patients with obesity, who may suffer from heart disease, hypertension, type-2 diabetes, arthritis, depression or ADHD. With decades of medical experience throughout the United States, he has been developing a comprehensive and systematic approach to battling obesity. He is the director of the Center for Integrative Medicine in Green Bay, Wis. (www.kppmd.com).

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