July 2, 2014

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Study says it is time to abandon obesity myths

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(Medical Xpress)—Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham say it is time to abandon some popular but erroneous obesity myths. In an article published June 23 in Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition, the research team presents nine obesity myths and 10 commonly held but unproven presumptions that the authors suggest lead to poor policy decisions, inaccurate public health recommendations and wasted resources.

The work is an expansion of a study first published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Jan. 31, 2013.

"Obesity is a topic on which many views are strongly held in the absence of scientific evidence to support those views, and some views are strongly held despite evidence to contradict those views," said David Allison, Ph.D., associate dean for science in the UAB School of Public Health and senior author of the paper. "We refer to the former as presumptions and the latter as myths."

For each of the 19 myths or presumptions, Allison's team—made up of international experts in and nutrition—describe the belief and offer evidence on why the belief is widely held. They then present the arguments used to either support or refute the belief. They also present evidence from randomized controlled trials when available.

For each of the nine myths, the author's conclusions and recommendations to policymakers and the public are the same. Abandon, and move on.

"It's vitally important to label these myths for what they are to prevent a misallocation of the resources available to address obesity, which is a serious problem," said Krista Casazza, Ph.D., assistant professor in the UAB Department of Nutrition Sciences and first author of the paper. "One intent with this paper is to offer conjecture on why these beliefs may be so widely held so we can find ways to limit the spread and dissemination of unsubstantiated beliefs going forward."

The nine obesity myths are:

The 10 presumptions are defined as beliefs that do not have definitive studies to support them. Casazza and Allison suggest those studies need to be done.

"These presumptions are often the force that drives decisions about , public health policies, public health recommendations or future research," said Casazza. "We need to generate the evidence in those areas where evidence is lacking. For many of the beliefs presented, randomized controlled trials would not be unduly difficult or expensive, and yet they have not been done."

The presumptions are:

Allison says the widespread acceptance of obesity myths and presumptions raises the larger question of why we so often believe things that are not so. The authors identified several factors that seem to contribute to this phenomenon. One is what psychologists call the "mere exposure effect"—repeating an idea often enough makes people more likely to believe it. Another factor is that people may like certain ideas so much that they hesitate to let them go despite evidence to the contrary. Then there is the phenomenon of "confirmation bias," where we tend to systematically seek out only sources of information that confirm our opinions.

"Fortunately, the scientific method and logical thinking are there to detect erroneous statements, counter bias and increase knowledge," said Allison. "We believe scientists need to seek answers to questions using the strongest experimental designs. As a scientific community, we need to be honest with the public about what we know and don't know as we evaluate proposed strategies for weight loss or ."

The authors also offer another suggestion that they believe would contribute to a more rational dialogue on obesity.

"In recent years, with the rise of the obesity epidemic, numerous papers have used the rhetoric of war in describing our efforts to abate this epidemic," said Casazza. "Indeed, it is well-documented that, under conditions of war or extreme emotional situations, propaganda is used and complex messages are distorted into simplistic slogans regardless of their truthfulness. As scientists, we should resist this sloganeering and perhaps downplay the emotional rhetoric of war, which may lead to a willingness to distort information and gloss over complexities."

Journal information: New England Journal of Medicine

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