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by Enginerrrd
1296 days ago
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It's not that dieting doesn't work. It's that telling people to diet, as a medical intervention, doesn't work. The science of dieting is refined. The science of getting people to diet however has not been very fruitful. It's probably one of the least successful interventions in all of modern medicine, so we obviously need to do better. |
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I think on the whole it’s a good thing to have psychological and physiological solutions to obesity. But I don’t think that changes anything. Ultimately the medical advice has remained consistent: the best way to lose and maintain weight is a healthy diet and/or physical activity. Calories in must be less than calories out to lose.
Unless someone has a truly impactful psychological or physiological obstacle to implementing that advice, what is gained pursuing any other end?
I agree with you but theoretically isn’t this kind of like “take your medicine” advice? If you don’t take the medicine, you don’t get better. To what end should we invest society’s resources into ever cleverer ways to get people to “take their medicine”?