Weight Loss Medication Bias – A Letter to the Editor

by Rich Weil, M.Ed., CDE
Transformation Weight Control
www.transformationweightcontrol.com

I was reading an article in the New York Times in 2023 about the problems and downside of having to take a weight loss medication for life – if in fact you do[1]. My thought was, “How much longer must we endure the never-ending onslaught of negative weight-loss medication headlines? They are insufferable.” So, I wrote
a letter to the NYT. They never published it, but here it is.

To The Editor:

RE: article about having to take weight loss medications for life It’s time we acknowledge and understand obesity for what it is, a chronic disease, and for many, a physical and/or psychological addiction to food, that requires chronic treatment. That may mean medication for life. But when you consider that tens of millions of individuals with obesity suffer the indignity of body shaming, self-loathing, depression, loss of self-esteem, social isolation, workplace bias, inability to get up off the toilet or out of a sofa, bend over and tie one’s shoes, shop at a brick and mortar store without judgment from the salesperson or find a department with clothes that fit, chairs in your doctor’s office that you can’t fit in and gowns and blood pressure cuffs that don’t fit, walking up or down a flight of stairs and having to wait 5 minutes before you catch your breath, difficulty getting in or out of a car, looking at a restaurant menu without fearing that all eyes are on you, then a lifetime of a medication that will solve the problem seems reasonable without the fear of what I call “medication bias” or “medication shaming”.


I don’t know a single soul, of the tens of thousands of patients and clients who I have treated over all my years, who woke up one day and thought what a great idea it would be to have obesity. In a study by Schwartz et al in the journal Obesity in 2006, 50% of adults polled in a  survey said they would give up a year of their life rather than be fat. Fifteen to 30% said they would rather walk away from their marriage, give up the possibility of having
children, be depressed, or become alcoholic rather than be obese. Five percent said they would rather lose a limb, while 4% said they would rather be blind.

And what about all the people who take other medications for life? Blood pressure, heart arrythmias or heart failure, asthma, depression, diabetes, and so many other diseases where an individual must take a medication
every day for life to manage their disease. I don’t hear anyone shaming someone for having to take a blood pressure pill for life, why do we shame individuals who take a weight loss medication for life? Having obesity is a disease like all the others. The shaming that takes place against taking a weight loss medication for life stems from a societal bias against anyone who has obesity. People will think, “why do they need to take a weight loss medication, just eat less and exercise more”, or “where’s their willpower and self-discipline?”

Having obesity is due to genetics (anywhere from 25% to 70%), epigenetics, dysregulation of appetite regulation, hormonal and dysfunctional brain biology affecting the food reward system, environmental factors, food supply, and so many more reasons. It’s time that we finally we gave up the obesity bias,  acknowledge obesity as a disease, out of the control of individuals, and celebrate that finally, after all these years, there is relief for individuals who have struggled all their adult life, or all of their life, with the challenge of obesity, losing weight, and keeping it off.


© 2024 Richard Weil All Rights Reserved