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This Issue
Obesity, COVID-19, and Racial Disparities
STOP Resources          
July
2020


This month's newsletter is written by guest author Fatima Cody Stanford. Dr. Fatima Cody Stanford, MD, MPH, MPA, FAAP, FACP, FAHA, FTOS is an obesity medicine physician and scientist at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School. This article was originally published by Newsweek under the title "America’s COVID-19 Response Must Tackle Obesity." It has been reproduced here with minor edits with the permission of the author. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own.


It wasn’t just the current White House that botched our nation’s response to COVID-19. This pandemic, which has led to more death in the United States than any other country in the world, hit us especially hard because it came on top of another health crisis that has disproportionately devastated Black and brown Americans: obesity.
 
The obesity epidemic impacts over 42 percent of all Americans, and the numbers are even higher in the Black and Hispanic communities—with obesity rates of nearly 48 percent and nearly 45 percent, respectively. Overall, more than 70 percent of American adults are considered overweight. 
 
Recent studies clearly demonstrate that people with obesity and COVID-19 are at higher risk of getting seriously ill and hospitalized. Patients with severe obesity have been overrepresented among those hospitalized for severe COVID-19 illness, especially among younger patients. These studies led the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to acknowledge obesity as a serious risk factor for COVID-19.
 
And when we have more people—particularly people of color—battling obesity in the United States than anywhere else in the world, we can’t tolerate inaction by our leaders any longer. It’s time for Washington to treat obesity like the disease that it is, rather than the personal failing it is not, and do its part to protect the most vulnerable Americans with targeted legislation like the Treat and Reduce Obesity Act (TROA).
 
Our longstanding approach to weight loss—one that emphasizes willpower and quick fixes—is clearly broken and doesn’t align with what is known about the genetic, biological and environmental factors that contribute to obesity. I’ve spent my medical career not only conducting obesity research but also working to improve the lives of countless patients who look like me—patients who often feel hopeless and lost in this broken system. And the data backs this up: In 2019, health insurance plans spent $344 billion on weight issues, while consumers spent $290 billion on weight-loss products—yet the country still gained 1 to 2 pounds per person.
 
Doctors and scientists studying metabolic health have known how to sustainably treat obesity for years. It comes down to finding the optimal treatment strategy, which may include successfully combining prescribed medication and personalized coaching over a year or more to give people the metabolic reset they need to lose excess body mass and keep it off. But with 175 million Americans with obesity and just over 4,000 obesity doctors, access to the proper care and treatment is nearly impossible. 
 .
This approach to tackling obesity has proved so successful that it’s one of the few things that Democrats and Republicans have agreed on over the past few years of unprecedented partisan gridlock. 
 
Since 2013, the TROA has been introduced in each new Congress with bipartisan primary co-sponsors in both the House and Senate. It now has over 170 congressional co-sponsors across the political spectrum. The bill would expand Medicare to cover intensive behavioral health therapy that would help Americans with obesity address underlying lifestyle factors that can significantly impact a person’s ability to lose weight, such as diet, sleep, exercise and emotional health. It would also expand obesity screenings and authorize Medicare Part D to cover FDA-approved weight loss medications that complement intensive behavioral health therapy.
 
This is exactly the kind of treatment and resources that Medicare covers for people with diabetes, but not for Americans on the brink of developing diabetes in the first place. It’s the same twisted logic that has given us a Congressional Diabetes Caucus but no similar caucus on obesity – even though obesity affects three times the number of people as diabetes and is at the root of many of the life-threatening chronic conditions – including diabetes itself.
 
Now, as lawmakers debate another inevitable COVID-19 relief package—it’s critical that they include the TROA to significantly reduce America’s disproportionate vulnerability to the coronavirus. It’s a smart investment that will not only create an immediate impact in communities hardest hit by COVID-19, but also save around $20 billion in Medicare spending over the first 10 years.
 
If a deadly virus that disproportionately impacts those with obesity doesn’t build the political will to finally tackle this country’s weight crisis, then what will?
 
We can’t continue to perpetuate the myth that the millions of Americans with obesity
simply don’t have the willpower to improve their health. We need to mobilize public health resources around obesity, as we have with COVID-19 and as we would with any other disease threatening American lives.   
 
Building a healthier world is very much within our grasp, but Washington has to do its part. 

       

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Announcements

Racial Disparities and Obesity fact sheet
GWSPH Health Care Worker COVID-19 Survey project
WOF Obesity, COVID-19 and Food Systems webinar
MMWR on COVID-19 recovery times
New COPE continuing education options
Racial Disparities and Obesity Fact Sheet
The STOP Obesity Alliance is adding a new fact sheet to their Fast Facts Series highlighting the disparities that racial and ethnic minorities face in obesity and obesity care.

Racial and ethnic minorities experience disproportionately poorer health outcomes for infectious and chronic diseases. Race and ethnicity affect both obesity prevalence and obesity treatment outcomes. Disparities in housing, employment, and health care caused by centuries of discrimination have contributed to poor health in racial and ethnic minority communities.To address health disparities, researchers and practitioners should address the social determinants of disease and engage communities to set priorities.

View the full fact sheet here.
Obesity, COVID-19 and Food Systems: Collective Action for a Healthy Recovery

Building on the success of the first six World Obesity Live events this interactive webinar, delivered in partnership with the Global Alliance for the Future of Food, took a step back and looked at obesity and COVID-19 in the wider context of food systems.

This webinar considered how local and global food environments have been impacted by COVID-19, and the importance of food systems transformation in ensuring a healthy recovery for people and the planet.

Watch the recording of the webinar here.
GWSPH Health Care Worker Survey Project
The George Washington Milken Institute School of Public Health has launched a web-based Health Care Worker COVID-19 Survey to collect information from health care workers across the country who have worked on the front lines of this pandemic. We would greatly appreciate your assistance in spreading word about the survey to any health care workers you know.

Learn more here.
ASMBS Fellow Project

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Introducing a new ASMBS-endorsed program organized to fulfill the didactic requirements for ASMBS certification and standardize the required Fellowship Council Curriculum. This monthly interactive web-based and high quality series features renowned content experts in bariatric surgery. 

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The Importance of Social Equality and Justice in our Specialty with Monique Hassan, MD, FACS 
 
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ACPM's Preventive Medicine 2020 Online
Preventive Medicine Goes Virtual July 15, July 29 and August 12

While we moved our conference online to be socially distant, the future of preventive medicine has never been closer.
 
Preventive Medicine 2020 Online will focus on big, bold, upstream ideas and the people, places, and programs that are making them a reality today. Transformation is only possible with a clear vision, audacious goals, an innovative mindset, and the will to implement new policy and practice, honestly evaluate change, and engage stakeholders at every level.
 
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Villanova COPE Continued Opportunities for Professional Education
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** Attention Dietitians: CDR has approved an expansion of the Activity Type 175: Recorded Pre-Approved maximum CPEUs to 45 CPEUs for RDs and 30 CPEUs for DTRs for all cycles that are currently active. Starting with cycles beginning June 2, 2021, the maximum CPEUs will return to 30 CPEUs for RDs and 20 for DTRs.

View continuing education options here.
MMWR on COVID-19 Recovery Times
The CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report recently revealed that the time it takes individuals to recover from COVID-19 may be longer than expected. They found that even among otherwise healthy young adults, 20% of COVID-19 patients were still experiencing symptoms 2-3 weeks after testing positive. They also found that those with obesity were twice as likely to experience symptoms and be unable to work 2-3 weeks after testing positive.

Read the full report here.
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