Obesity: why the approach is changing

Redefining the approach to obesity

Obesity is increasingly understood not as a matter of willpower or aesthetics, but as a multifaceted, long‑term medical condition shaped by biological, behavioral, social, and environmental influences. This broader understanding has prompted major shifts in prevention strategies, clinical practice, public policy, and scientific research. This article outlines the factors behind this change, reviews supporting evidence and examples, presents emerging tools and care models, and examines the challenges and consequences for patients, healthcare professionals, and communities.

Understanding obesity and its significance

Obesity is usually defined by body mass index (BMI) thresholds (BMI ≥30 kg/m² for adults), but BMI is a crude measure that does not capture body composition, fat distribution, or metabolic health. Excess adiposity increases risk for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, osteoarthritis, sleep apnea, and depression. Globally, rates of overweight and obesity rose markedly during the late 20th and early 21st centuries; earlier World Health Organization reporting emphasized that obesity prevalence had roughly tripled since 1975. In many high-income countries, roughly four in ten adults now have obesity or severe obesity; prevalence is rising in low- and middle-income countries as well, with significant health and economic impacts.

Main forces prompting the shift in approach

  • Recognition of obesity as a chronic, relapsing disease: Professional organizations and many health systems increasingly regard obesity much like hypertension or diabetes, emphasizing sustained management instead of brief dieting efforts. This approach redirects care toward long-term planning and relapse reduction.
  • Advances in biological understanding: Research has deepened insight into how appetite, energy use, fat accumulation, and body weight are governed by intricate neuroendocrine pathways involving leptin, insulin, gut hormones, hypothalamic circuits, along with influences from genetics, epigenetics, and the gut microbiome. This reinforces the view that biology, not simply willpower, contributes to recurrent weight gain.
  • New, effective pharmacotherapies: Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) including semaglutide, as well as dual GIP/GLP-1 treatments such as tirzepatide, have demonstrated substantially greater average weight reductions than older medications in randomized studies, often achieving double-digit percentage losses of initial body weight when paired with lifestyle guidance. These findings have reshaped expectations for medical intervention.
  • Evidence for multidisciplinary and integrated care: Clinical trials and program assessments indicate that combining medical treatment, nutritional guidance, behavioral strategies, physical activity support, and at times surgery leads to superior outcomes compared with single‑component methods.
  • Policy and environmental focus: Increasing data show that food systems, city planning, marketing, and socioeconomic conditions influence population-wide weight trends, prompting measures such as taxes on sugar‑sweetened beverages, prominent front‑of‑package labels, and updated school nutrition rules.
  • Digital health and data-driven care: Telemedicine, behavior‑change apps, remote coaching, and digital phenotyping allow scalable interventions and continuous tracking, broadening access to comprehensive care.
  • Shift away from stigma and toward person-centered language: Advocacy and research emphasize that weight-related stigma damages health and discourages individuals from obtaining support; as a result, guideline developers and clinicians are adopting person-first, respectful communication.

Evidence and concrete examples

  • Clinical trial breakthroughs: The STEP trials involving semaglutide and the SURMOUNT trials examining tirzepatide revealed average weight decreases far above those commonly seen with earlier drugs or lifestyle-only strategies. STEP 1 documented mean losses close to 15% over 68 weeks when semaglutide was paired with lifestyle guidance, while SURMOUNT data showed mean reductions nearing or surpassing 20% with tirzepatide at certain doses and in select groups. These levels of reduction significantly influence clinical decision-making regarding comorbidity management and surgical eligibility.
  • Population policy impact: Mexico’s excise tax on sugar-sweetened beverages, introduced in 2014, has been linked to ongoing declines in purchases of taxed drinks and rises in purchases of untaxed alternatives; assessments indicated several percent drops in taxed beverage acquisitions during the first two years, especially among households with lower incomes. These consumption changes shift overall caloric exposure across the population.
  • Surgery as effective long-term treatment: Bariatric interventions such as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy are tied to marked, lasting weight reduction along with lower diabetes incidence and mortality in numerous investigations. Growing acceptance of surgery for appropriate candidates adds to the range of medical and behavioral treatment options.
  • Real-world program innovation: Health systems and insurers in certain regions now provide integrated weight-management centers that unite endocrinology, behavioral health, nutrition, exercise physiology, and pharmacotherapy, producing measurable gains in cardiometabolic indicators and patient-reported outcomes across 12 to 24 months.

New tools, models, and their limits

  • Pharmacotherapy: Modern agents act on central and peripheral pathways to reduce appetite, slow gastric emptying, and alter energy balance. They are effective but not curative: stopping medication commonly leads to weight regain, raising questions about long-term duration, cost, monitoring, and safety. Side effects include gastrointestinal symptoms and rare but serious risks that require clinician oversight.
  • Precision and personalized care: Research aims to match therapies to patient phenotypes—genetic variants, eating behavior types, microbiome signatures, and comorbidity profiles—to improve outcomes. Progress is promising but still emerging.
  • Behavioral and psychosocial interventions: Cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, and structured lifestyle programs remain foundational. They are essential for skills, relapse prevention, and addressing emotional and social drivers of eating.
  • Digital interventions: Telehealth, remote coaching, and mobile apps can improve reach and adherence, but engagement and long-term effectiveness vary. Combining digital tools with human support yields better results than apps alone in most studies.
  • Health systems and reimbursement: A major barrier to broader implementation is inconsistent coverage for obesity care, including newer medications and multidisciplinary services. When payers cover comprehensive care, uptake and outcomes improve.

Equity, ethics, and social determinants

Confronting obesity involves addressing social determinants like poverty, restricted availability of nutritious foods, neighborhood safety concerns, targeted marketing aimed at vulnerable groups, and entrenched structural inequities. Emerging pharmaceutical and surgical treatments could deepen existing disparities if only individuals with sufficient resources or specific insurance plans can obtain them. Ethical considerations encompass respecting individual autonomy while implementing population-wide measures such as taxes or regulations, overseeing the commercial interests of food and pharmaceutical companies, and preventing excessive medicalization while still ensuring access to evidence-based care.

Case vignette: integrated care in action

A 46-year-old woman with BMI 36 kg/m², newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes, and sleep apnea presents to primary care. Under an integrated model she receives:

  • Comprehensive assessment including metabolic panel, sleep evaluation, and psychosocial screening;
  • A personalized plan combining a GLP-1 receptor agonist, referral to a registered dietitian for structured behavioral therapy, an exercise program adapted to joint pain, and sleep apnea management;
  • Regular telehealth follow-up and remote weight monitoring, with medication adjustments and support for medication side effects.

After 12 months she loses 12–18% of baseline weight, has improved glycemic control (A1c reduction), reduced sleep apnea severity, and reports improved quality of life. This case illustrates the synergy of medical, behavioral, and system-level support.

Challenges and unanswered questions

  • Long-term outcomes and safety: Durability of response to new medications and long-term safety profiles beyond trial durations remain areas of active study.
  • Cost and access: High prices for new drugs and limited reimbursement threaten equitable implementation; economic evaluations vary by health system and formulation of care.
  • Weight maintenance strategies: Best practices for transitioning from intensive therapy to maintenance, including role and duration of pharmacotherapy, are still being defined.
  • Population-level impact: It is unclear how individual-level pharmacologic advances will interact with environmental and policy interventions to change population prevalence without broader structural change.

What this means for clinicians, patients, and policymakers

  • Clinicians: Should adopt evidence-based, non-stigmatizing, longitudinal approaches—screening routinely, discussing weight as a health issue, offering or referring for comprehensive care, and staying current on therapies and their risks.
  • Patients: Can expect a broader range of effective options beyond diets, including medications and multidisciplinary services; realistic conversations about benefits, side effects, and long-term commitment are essential.
  • Policymakers and payers: Need to weigh investments in prevention, environmental policy, and coverage for evidence-based clinical care to reduce inequities and long-term costs associated with obesity-related disease.

The approach to obesity is shifting from quick interventions and moralistic views toward long-term, multi-layered strategies grounded in biological understanding, enhanced treatments, coordinated care systems, and public policies that reshape environments, an evolution that opens meaningful possibilities for improved health at individual and societal scales while requiring close attention to fairness, enduring safety, and the interplay between clinical and social responses.

By Roger W. Watson