- a prospective parent with a high BMI was probably fat and lazy and wouldn’t be sufficiently “active” to look after a child. I had this explained to me in detail by my then boss, which resulted in an argument because: surprise! I was a new parent with a high BMI!
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Even if you have an obese patient who is legitimately experiencing health issues, BMI does jack all to identify the underlying cause, which results in fat patients getting told over and over to just loose weight and exercise, to the exclusion of any real diagnosis.
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I recall a story about a fat woman with breathing issues whose doctor looked only at her BMI, ignored her pleas for other tests, and told her to lose weight. She had a tumour. By the time the doctor felt comfortable “ruling out” weight, it had grown inoperable. She died.
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This is not an isolated incident. It is frighteningly common. And thanks to the medical obsession with BMI and the focus on thinness over health, weight loss behaviours that would be instantly pegged as disordered and dangerous in the thin are *actively encouraged* in the fat.
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During a checkup a year or so ago, my GP high-fived me for weight loss after looking at my prior weight, counting weeks under her breath, and seemingly concluding that I’d lost it at a good rate. Had she actually asked me, I could’ve told her: no, that is not what happened.
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I’d lost it all in just under a fortnight where, due to depression and other physical issues, I’d barely eaten or moved. It all came back on as soon as I recovered. But when I went back after genuinely improving my exercise & eating? More muscle, so higher BMI, so no high five.
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Here’s the thing, though: my GP is, in all other respects, lovely - and when I report a problem, she actually listens and schedules the relevant tests instead of assuming it’s because I’m fat. But even *she* still has a blind spot about weight and BMI. It’s trained into doctors.
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Did you know they still monitor your BMI when you’re pregnant? A charming and pointless source of stress! I nearly wept with relief when the GP I saw while pregnant openly acknowledged, “Yeah, this is utter fake bullshit and we shouldn’t be using it, just ignore it.”
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Replying to @fozmeadows
My doctor’s online web portal informed me that my BMI was unhealthily high when I was 39 weeks pregnant. True story. (I, uh, considered losing some of that weight very shortly thereafter
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Replying to @hannahnpbowman @fozmeadows
39 weeks! My weight had increased during a full-term pregnancy!!
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