Obesity is fundamentally a condition where physiology and behavior of individuals meet the environment, and the emerging global obesity pandemic reflects the contribution of a wide range of cultural, societal, economic and systemic driving forces. Today, different areas of obesity research are relatively separated from each other in discrete silos, with biomedical research determining most of our understanding and solution strategies. This has led to the Y in the road, which means the questionable assumption that effective drug treatment of individual patients is also an effective measure to improve population health. Since human obesity is a condition of population health and planetary impact a better integration of biomedical and public health approaches is based on critical (self-)reflection and communicative understanding of scientists from various research areas who should be on an equal footing.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- high fat diet induced
- type diabetes
- public health
- weight gain
- endothelial cells
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- adipose tissue
- body mass index
- skeletal muscle
- peritoneal dialysis
- physical activity
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells