Control For What

I see and note this. I havenโ€™t read the paper and probably wonโ€™t soon (too much else to read).

I am very suspicious, though, of studies where factors are โ€œcontrolledโ€ out. Itโ€™d take more time to examine than I have, however. Just all too often scientists โ€œcontrolโ€ for the very thing they should be examining, befitting the biases of the time. I do think there is anti-obesity bias in health care. Iโ€™m not saying itโ€™s there for a good reason, but I understand why itโ€™s present: obese people have worse outcomes across a wide range of diseases and conditions, and many conditions could be vastly improved and sometimes eliminated by just losing weight (examples: diabetes, PCOS, asthma, etc.)

I know to the fat acceptance types all of this can be explained somehow by bias, but that seems just excuse-making, considering The Health Effects of Overweight and Obesity.

All that said, obese people should get equitable treatment in health care and elsewhere, too. But I donโ€™t want it to become a โ€œdangerous truthโ€ that there are risks to obesity. We already pretend that too much that is the case is not โ€” letโ€™s not allow this to become yet another area of absurd pantomime.