The world in weight: The weekly round-up
I’ve got lots of blog topics collecting dust in my brain, but no time to write them just now. Instead, here are a few weight-related topics in the news to chew on.

Wow. A major newspaper - The Sacramento Bee - has acknowledged body weight may be more a case of genes and metabolism than the “just eat less and exercise more” mantra - “Is it your fate to be fat?” They even consult and cite Gina Kolata. But what article wouldn’t be replete without the usual caveats on how folks can circumvent their genetic destinies to lose weight anyway. And you have to love the pro-ana advice given to fat people at the article’s conclusion by a so-called “expert on diet and fitness.”

Trailing on the heels of the Washington Post article on weight-based discrimination in health care comes an article by The News-Leader on the same topic. The same assumptions are there - that fat people are fat because of their diet and lifestyle habits - but the article does give tips for health-care providers on how they can be more sensitive to issues of weight.

Kate Spicer, one of the BBC journalists who embarked on an extreme diet for the documentary “Super Skinny Me” has been making the media rounds. She appeared yesterday on NPR’s Talk of the Nation, along with Dr. James Lock, head of the Eating Center program at Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford University. She also has an editorial in the Salt Lake Tribune documenting her experiences. Concludes Spicer:
Some people are naturally skinny. Many others admit that they have to work hard at it. After my brief but torturous glimpse into their world, I pity them. Those women who choose to make skinniness their main asset are really only living half a life.

And finally, the TVO network will premiere the Emmy-nominated documentary Thin at 9 p.m. EST March 2, followed by an online panel discussion with experts on eating disorders at its website, www.tvoparents.com, who will take questions and comments from the online public starting at 10:45 p.m. For those of you who haven’t heard of Lauren Greenfield’s documentary, the HBO film chronicles the experiences of four young women with eating disorders who are patients at the Renfrew Center, a residential facility for the treatment of eating disorders. More information on Thin here. TVO is a Canadian station, so I’m unsure if folks in the U.S. or elsewhere have access, but the panel discussion is accessible for everyone. See TVO’s press release for more information on the premiere and for a list of panel experts.
Update: Junk Food Science is reporting that Polly Ann Williams, one of the women featured in the documentary, has died. Read Greenfield’s obituary to her here.
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