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Consumer Affairs

Poll Finds Docs Blow Off Obesity

Many people who are overweight or obese say they have never been told by their doctors to lose weight


A new Harris Poll suggests that many doctors are doing little or nothing to help their overweight patients to lose weight.  

Using classifications defined by the World Health Organization, 19 percent of those who are morbidly obese (with a Body Mass Index, or BMI, of 35.0 or greater), 46 percent of those who are obese (BMI of between 30.0 and 34.99) and 72 percent who are overweight but not obese (BMI of between 25.0 and 29.99) say their doctors have never told them to lose weight. 

Self-help 

Many of these people clearly recognize that they should lose weight and have made a New Year's resolution to do so, including 62 percent of the morbidly obese, 59 percent of the obese and 49 percent of the overweight. 

Many of those who are overweight have participated at some time in their lives in programs to try to manage their weight.  In most cases these were their own personal programs rather than formal programs run by weight loss companies such as Weight Watchers or Jenny Craig or programs by their employers or insurance companies. 

However it is notable that 19 percent of the morbidly obese, 27 percent of the obese and 31 percent of the overweight have never participated in any weight management program, even one of their own. 

These are some of the results of The Harris Poll of 2,566 adults surveyed online between January 17 and 24, 2011 by Harris Interactive. 

Among the survey's other findings: 

  • Fully 44 percent of all adults say they made a New Year's resolution to lose weight, including 47 percent of women and 40 percent of men;
  • One in five adults (19 percent) report their weight has caused them health problems, including 64 percent of the morbidly obese and 23 percent of the obese; and,
  • A third of all adults (32 percent) have been told by their doctors that they should lose weight.  However, as noted above many of those who are overweight (and even 19 percent who are morbidly obese) have never been told that they should do so.

 

So what?

Obesity and the need to greatly reduce it has become a front-page story. First Lady Michelle Obama has made childhood obesity her cause

A new study by the Society of Actuaries  calculates that the total cost of overweight and obesity in the United States is about $270 billion per year.  

And a paper published recently in the medical journal The Lancet claims that one in every ten adults is now obese.  Furthermore, it is predicted that this obesity epidemic will trigger a huge increase in many diseases from diabetes and arthritis to several types of cancer, heart disease and depression. 

The Harris survey suggests that while a reasonably good job of warning people of the need to lose weight is being done, doctors need to get much more involved in weight loss, and to increase their participation in weight management programs.

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