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Myths, Presumptions, and Facts about Obesity
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Myths, Presumptions, and Facts about Obesity

Krista Casazza, Kevin R Fontaine, Arne Astrup, Leann L Birch, Andrew W Brown, Michelle M Bohan Brown, Nefertiti Durant, Gareth Dutton, E. Michael Foster, Steven B Heymsfield, …
The New England journal of medicine, Vol.368(5), pp.446-454
01-31-2013
PMCID: PMC3606061
PMID: 23363498

Abstract

This commentary reviews common myths and presumptions about obesity and also provides some useful evidence-based concepts about overweight and obesity. Passionate interests, the human tendency to seek explanations for observed phenomena, and everyday experience appear to contribute to strong convictions about obesity, despite the absence of supporting data. When the public, mass media, government agencies, and even academic scientists espouse unsupported beliefs, the result may be ineffective policy, unhelpful or unsafe clinical and public health recommendations, and an unproductive allocation of resources. In this article, we review some common beliefs about obesity that are not supported by scientific evidence and also provide some useful evidence-based concepts. We define myths as beliefs held to be true despite substantial refuting evidence, presumptions . . .
url
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMsa1208051View
Published (Version of record) Open

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