Healthcare Advocates Unveil Historic Obesity Bill of Rights
The legislative proposal outlines eight key fundamental rights designed to ensure proper care and protection for individuals with obesity, including proper diagnosis, screening, counseling, and sufficient treatment under medical guidelines, while obliterating ageism and weight bias across the healthcare system.
Further, officials highlight bleak outcomes for cases of untreated obesity, leading to over 230 medical conditions, including high blood pressure, heart disease, certain cancers, and diabetes.
Dorothea Vafiadis, senior director for NCOA shared the sentiments of many obese Americans, many of whom felt invisible and hopeless from a lack of support and proper treatment within medical spaces.
"We live sick and we die quick."
"This man had lost several relatives to diet-related obesity, all dying around the age of 50", Vafiadis told the Informer. "It was very powerful to hear the stories of older adults and their search for information to be recognized, to get the care that they need and to feel supported."
The OBR highlights the severe disparities in chronic obesity seen in communities of color, particularly among the Black American community. Nearly 48% of African American adults are clinically obese, with 37.1% of men and 56.6% of women compared to 32.6% of white Americans.
Stanford emphasized the crucial importance of reducing stigma and bias towards patients managing obesity in medical spaces, as obesity shows to be a complex chronic disease largely influenced by a multitude of factors including food insecurity, trauma, and psychological triggers outside of the common focus of dietary habits.
"A lot of people talk about biological or medical reasons, age-related changes. Those menopausal changes and perimenopausal changes will affect you. Genetics and epigenetics, something about us being Black people may affect us. Different medications that are prescribed to us, or sleep deficit may affect us, but we don't ever hear about those things."
She considered mental health as a contributing factor to many obesity struggles. "What was mom's stress? What was her obesity? What were all of mom's issues when she was going through pregnancy? What is your trauma history? Are you dealing with emotional coping issues? We haven't talked about those issues."
The Obesity Bill of Rights has received a collective endorsement from 36 leading organizations, including the American Nurses Association, the Academy of Nutrition, and the Obesity Action Coalition. Likewise, the collective's efforts are publicly backed by prominent policy makers such as Rep. Gwen Moore (D-WI), and Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-OH), who are also leading the Treat and Reduce Obesity Act (TROA) to push expansion of access to obesity treatments across the country.
"Obesity is a chronic condition- not a personal or moral failing. We need to ensure our health care system treats it as a disease so that Americans with obesity can access holistic, high quality care that meets the full spectrum of their needs," Moore said.

Comments
Post a Comment