Documentary why am i so fat




















Robb Wolf Self as Self. Kinna McInroe Self as Self. Hale Self as Self. Bill Phillips Self as Self. Stephen Cabral Self as Self. Al Sears Self as Self as Dr. Al Sears. Gabriel Evans Self as Self. Alicia Coppola Self as Self. Anthony Michael Jones Self as Self. Bill A. Jones Self as Self. Shawn Perine Self as Self. Adam Bornstein Self as Self. Ashley Borden Self as Self.

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Yeo thinks so, as he admits that he worries about his girth yet has never tested himself for FTO. We drive next to Wales to discuss bariatric surgery, which reduces the stomach size but also alters hormone secretions. How significant is the alteration of hormone secretions to weight loss?

So will this lead to a new treatment that doctors can prescribe? Maybe not, as they do not discuss how long the effect lasts or the cost of these injections. Also never discussed is the issue of food choices made by the subjects, an oversight repeated in every scenario throughout the documentary. Instead, we move on the Providence, Rhode Island on our road trip, having driven over the Atlantic to discuss gut bacteria.

We meet a woman who gained four stone 54 lbs to American viewers over years after she received a stool transplant from her obese daughter to treat C.

Could the change in gut bacteria explain her weight gain? Researchers have started human trials using stool transplants from lean donors, monitoring GLP-1 as a surrogate marker, to answer this question. Unfortunately, we move on before getting any results. Never fear, I googled it. I found one study that showed a potential benefit and another study that did not. Yep, sounds about right. The literature on obesity treatment is rife with ambiguity.

Could this be because the etiology of obesity is multifactorial? Driving next to St. The stools in a set of twins revealed the bacteria Christensenella to be significantly more prevalent in the stool of the thin twin compared to her obese twin.

Does this suggest causation? No proof of that as yet. Yeo from making this conclusion:. Possibly, eventually, but not until we have an honest discussion of all factors. Despite addressing what he calls an obesogenic environment awash in fast food restaurants serving highly processed foods, Dr. Yeo proceeds to accept this reality as inevitable, making no effort to buy his dinner elsewhere. Watching the star of the documentary on obesity chow down on highly processed foods makes me decidedly less confident.

Documentaries that address obesity and focus only on food choices run the risk of blaming obese people for their weight. This documentary suffers from the other extreme. By focusing only on genetics and diminishing or even dismissing other factors, Dr. Yeo has failed to answer his own question.



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