The vices and virtues of medical models of obesity.
Jonathan ShollAndreas De BlockPublished in: Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity (2024)
Despite numerous public health organizations supporting the pathologization of obesity and considering recent obesity rates a health crisis, many researchers in the humanities, social sciences, and even in the health sciences remain unconvinced. In this paper, we address a set of arguments coming from these academic fields that criticize medical models of obesity for their supposedly flawed diagnostic categories that shift focus onto individuals and support moralizing judgements. Clarifying some key claims in these models and explicating the view of obesity in terms of energy dysregulation, we aim to tease apart misunderstandings and argue that not only do these models not say what they are often accused of saying, but their apparent vices may actually be virtues in helping to combat stigma. Building on the social psychology of stigma and disease labeling, we then suggest that current medical models are largely supportive of many moral and political aims promoted by critics of these models.
Keyphrases
- public health
- healthcare
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- mental health
- type diabetes
- high fat diet induced
- weight gain
- skeletal muscle
- mental illness
- magnetic resonance imaging
- hepatitis c virus
- health information
- computed tomography
- health insurance
- antiretroviral therapy
- climate change
- health promotion
- contrast enhanced