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Regulating commercial weight-loss programs

02.16.09 | Canadian Medical Association Journal

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The commercial weight-loss industry is big business in North America, and the $50 billion industry should be regulated to safeguard people's health, write Dr. Yoni Freedhoff, Dr. Arya Sharma and the CMAJ editorial team http://www.cmaj.ca/press/pg367.pdf . Despite expert agreement that obesity management requires long-term behavioural, medical or surgical interventions, many commercial weight-loss programs create impossible expectations and false beliefs.

"Physicians, governments and public health departments all share medical and moral obligations to protect consumers from shady weight-loss practices," write the authors. "Since weight-loss addresses a medical concern for which treatment guidelines exist, weight-loss products and services must be regulated to protect consumer health."

"Before we can truly address the devastating obesity epidemic, we must first stem the centuries-old flow of snake oil," they state, calling on governments to require accreditation of weight-loss providers and for these providers to supply evidence-based information for their claims.

Canadian Medical Association Journal

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APA:
Canadian Medical Association Journal. (2009, February 16). Regulating commercial weight-loss programs. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80V52WXL/regulating-commercial-weight-loss-programs.html
MLA:
"Regulating commercial weight-loss programs." Brightsurf News, Feb. 16 2009, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80V52WXL/regulating-commercial-weight-loss-programs.html.