Should obesity be labelled a disease?
Obesity has been the topic du jour for quite some time now.
“Rise in surgery due to obesity crisis costing NHS £200 million a year!” is the latest in a long line of concerning headlines.
According to a report by the Sunday Times, more than 41,000 obese patients needed hip or knee replacement surgeries because of their weight.
Even more worryingly that figure included seven teenage girls aged between 15 and 19.
What’s more this 575% increase in surgery is costing the NHS £200 million a year, which is just a fraction of the £6 billion from the NHS budget that obesity costs.
As these stats clearly illustrate the fact that the UK is in the grips of an obesity crisis isn’t really up for debate, but what people do disagree about is whether obesity itself should be classed as a disease or a lifestyle choice.
Obesity is thought to affect around one in every four adults in the UK, and roughly one in five children aged 10 to 11.
Last week, The Royal College of Physicians called for obesity to be reclassified as a disease, claiming the change was necessary in order for the issue to be tackled effectively by healthcare professionals.
Outlining plans to reclassify obesity as a disease, RCP president Professor Andrew Goddard said: “It is important to the health of the nation that we remove the stigma associated with obesity.
“It is not a lifestyle choice caused by individual greed, but a disease caused by health inequalities, genetic influences and social factors.”
But not everyone agrees. This morning on ‘Good Morning Britain’ the debate was ignited once again.
In a discussion about whether obesity should be labelled a disease weight loss expert Steve Miller said we have to get much stronger on fat: “We are normalising fat, now we’re saying it’s a disease. It is a great excuse to give people and it’s a dangerous thing to say,” he said.
“Don’t we need a bit of fat-shaming,” interjecting Piers Morgan. “We have the worst obesity rates in Europe. We have a lot of fat people with a lot of sedentary fat people and now the debate is moving away from come on get off the coach, get fit eat healthy, to lets find an excuse, lets label it a disease.”
And viewers were quick to take to Twitter to offer their own opinions on the thorny subject.
Many agreed that obesity shouldn’t be labelled a disease.
Not disease. I think adults & kids,(not all), have opted to spend more time playing on gaming machines rather than getting out and about. As a child I was never indoors, so I burnt off calories. Life has changed and I blame the internet and gaming. Everything in life is a choice
— Shellie Harris (@ShellieLou1974) January 7, 2019
I don’t think it’s a disease, but for some (a minority )it might be an addiction. I think there is also an element of ignorance about nutrition and portion control. Our parents are the first people in our lives to determine our diet, it saddens me to see more and more fat infants
— 🌸🌸🌸🧘♀️Joanne🏃🏻♀️🌸🌸🌸 (@RookieRunner73) January 7, 2019
With the exception of a tiny minority of unfortunate people, being fat is simply the result of eating too much and exercising too little. To call it a disease (solely in order to justify topping up the “public health” £ troughs to “fix” it) is an outright political lie.
— Adam Cleave (@AdamCleave) January 7, 2019
While others argued that there could be many underlying medical issues that contribute to people’s weight.
It’s actually more complicated than rocket science. We’ve been to the moon and low earth orbit but unable to cure obesity. Your body will process a calorie of sugar differently to a calorie of protein. #GMB https://t.co/Z0YjT3oXRo
— Stephen Collopy (@Sgcollopy) January 7, 2019
Obesity is a societal disease rather than a medical disease, we live in a world of convenience. Fast food, microwave meal BOGOF offers on most things unhealthy. We need to educate society rather than throw labels around. #GMB
— Carlton Brackstone (@CBrackstone92) January 7, 2019
Is anorexia a lifestyle choice too???
— Dave rodney (@Daverodney4) January 7, 2019
Looks like this could be a debate that will run and run.
Follow us on Instagram and Facebook for non-stop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day. For Twitter updates, follow @YahooStyleUK.
Read more from Yahoo Style UK:
Easy ways to cut your child’s sugar consumption in 2019
Tackle obesity with low-calories shakes and soup diets, say researchers
Just how healthy are vegetarian and vegan fast food options?