Q&A: Is Obesity Really a Disease?

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Q&A: Is Obesity Really a Disease?

You may hear different messages about obesity:

  • Some people say it is just about willpower.
  • Others say it is a real medical disease.

So which is it?

This Q&A will explain what doctors and health groups mean when they call obesity a disease, and what that means for you as a patient.

This article is general education, not personal medical advice.
Always talk to your own health care provider (or a SendSlim clinician) about your health and treatment options.


Q: What does it mean to call something a “disease”?

A disease is a health problem that:

  • Affects how the body normally works
  • Has clear signs or symptoms, or clear medical changes inside the body
  • Often has known risk factors, treatments, and long-term effects

Calling something a disease does not mean:

  • You are a bad person
  • You “failed”
  • You did something wrong

It simply means the condition is serious enough that it needs real medical care, not just advice to “try harder.”


Q: Do major medical groups see obesity as a disease?

Yes. Today, many major medical and scientific groups recognize obesity as a chronic (long-term) disease. These include:

  • The World Health Organization (WHO)
  • The American Medical Association (AMA)
  • The American Association of Clinical Endocrinology (AACE)
  • The Obesity Society and others

They describe obesity as:

  • Chronic – it tends to last a long time and often comes back
  • Relapsing – weight can go down and then back up
  • Multifactorial – caused by many things, not just food choices

Q: Why do experts call obesity a disease?

Experts see obesity as a disease for several reasons:

  1. Complex causes, not just willpower
    Obesity is linked to many factors working together, such as:
    • Genetics (how your body is built and how it stores fat)
    • Hormones and brain signals that affect hunger and fullness
    • Medications you take
    • Your environment (food choices around you, work, stress, sleep, income, etc.)
    Many of these are not fully under your control.
  2. Real changes in the body
    Obesity is tied to changes in:
    • Blood sugar and insulin
    • Blood pressure and cholesterol
    • Inflammation in the body
    • Fat stored around organs (like the liver and around the heart)
  3. Higher risk of serious diseases
    Having obesity raises the risk of:
    • Type 2 diabetes
    • Heart disease and stroke
    • High blood pressure and high cholesterol
    • Sleep apnea
    • Some cancers (such as colon, breast after menopause, uterine, kidney, and others)

Because of these real, measurable changes and risks, many doctors see obesity as more than a “look” issue. It is a health condition that can harm the body over time.


Q: Does calling obesity a disease mean everyone with a higher weight is unhealthy?

No. This is important:

  • Some people in larger bodies have good blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol.
  • Some people in smaller bodies have serious health problems.

Doctors often use BMI (body mass index) as one tool to talk about weight, but BMI is not perfect:

  • It does not show where fat is stored in the body
  • It does not measure muscle vs fat
  • It does not look at overall health or fitness

So, calling obesity a disease does not mean:

  • Every person with a certain BMI is “sick”
  • Every person with a lower BMI is “healthy”

It means that when extra body fat starts to harm health (for example, causing diabetes, high blood pressure, or sleep apnea), doctors treat this as a medical problem that deserves care.


Q: Does this mean my weight is my fault?

No.

Saying obesity is a disease is meant to move away from blame.

It does not erase personal choices, but it does recognize that:

  • People live in different bodies with different genetics
  • Not everyone has access to safe places to exercise or fresh, healthy food
  • Stress, trauma, medications, and sleep can all affect weight
  • The body has systems that try to defend a certain weight, making weight loss and weight maintenance very hard for many people

So instead of saying:

“You just need more willpower,”

the disease model says:

“This is a real health condition with many causes. You deserve real help.”


Q: Does calling obesity a disease mean I must lose weight?

Not automatically.

Your health goals are personal. You and your clinician can decide together what matters most for you, such as:

  • Lowering blood pressure or blood sugar
  • Improving sleep and energy
  • Reducing pain in joints
  • Feeling better in daily life

For some people, weight loss is part of that plan.
For others, the focus may be more on:

  • Improving food quality
  • Adding gentle movement
  • Better sleep and stress care
  • Protecting mental health

You always have the right to ask:

“What are my options, and what are the pros and cons?”


Q: How can seeing obesity as a disease help patients?

Seeing obesity as a disease can help in several ways:

  1. More serious treatment
    Doctors may be more likely to:
    • Offer medical nutrition counseling
    • Help with structured programs for weight management
    • Consider medications for weight loss when appropriate
    • Refer to bariatric surgery centers if needed
  2. Less blame, more support
    When obesity is seen as a disease, it shifts the focus from “you’re the problem” to “let’s treat the problem together.”
  3. Better long-term care
    Like other long-term conditions (such as high blood pressure), obesity care works best with ongoing follow-up, not just a short diet.

In some cases, calling obesity a disease can also support better insurance coverage for treatment options, though this can still vary by plan.


Q: Does this fix weight stigma?

Sadly, no.

Even though many groups now say obesity is a disease, weight stigma is still very common. Stigma means:

  • Being judged or treated unfairly because of your weight
  • Facing teasing, bullying, or rude comments
  • Being treated with less respect in health care, work, or daily life

Stigma can cause real harm to mental and physical health.

At SendSlim, we believe:

  • People in larger bodies deserve kind, respectful, non-judgmental care
  • You are more than a number on a scale or a BMI chart
  • Our job is to help you protect your health, not to shame you

Q: What does SendSlim Clinic believe about obesity?

At SendSlim Clinic (part of Affection Health Care LLC), we:

  • Treat obesity as a chronic medical condition, not a moral failure
  • Understand that weight is affected by biology, life history, and environment, not just “choices”
  • Focus on health, safety, and quality of life, not just a goal number on the scale
  • Use tools like:
    • Simple, realistic food and movement changes
    • Support for emotional eating, stress, and sleep
    • Weight-loss medications when they are safe and truly needed

We offer telehealth visits for adults in California and Nevada, so you can get care from home.


Key Takeaways

  • Many major health groups now say obesity is a chronic disease.
  • This does not mean every person in a larger body is automatically unhealthy, or that BMI tells the whole story.
  • Obesity has many causes and is linked to higher risk of diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and some cancers.
  • Calling obesity a disease is meant to reduce blame and increase access to real medical care and support.
  • You and your provider can decide together what goals make sense for you — weight is only one part of your health.

If you live in California or Nevada and want a respectful, medical approach to weight and health, you can start by booking a telehealth visit with SendSlim to talk about your options.


Internal reference sources for you (not for posting on your site; you can delete this section):
Major organizations recognizing obesity as a chronic disease and describing its causes and risks, including WHO and multiple national societies Advances in Medicine Network+4World Health Organization+4ASMBS+4; AMA’s decision to classify obesity as a disease in 2013 Public Citizen+3Policy Finder+3PMC+3; evidence that obesity increases risk of diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and certain cancers M3 Wake Research+5NIDDK+5UCSF Plastic Surgery+5; research on the multifactorial and genetic nature of obesity and the role of environment and stigma CDC Archive+5PMC+5ScienceDirect+5; summaries for patient education on obesity as a disease and its impact from clinical and advocacy organizations. thrombosis.org+5ASMBS+5obesitymedicine.org+5

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