What do weight loss drugs mean for a diet industry built on eating less and exercising more?

politics2024-05-21 16:36:25431

NEW YORK (AP) — Ever since college, Brad Jobling struggled with his weight, fluctuating between a low of 155 pounds when he was in his 30s to as high as 220. He spent a decade tracking calories on WeightWatchers, but the pounds he dropped always crept back onto his 5-foot-5-inch frame.

A little over a year ago, the 58-year-old Manhattan resident went on a new weight loss drug called Wegovy. He’s lost 30 pounds, and has started eating healthier food and exercising — the habits behind many commercial diet plans and decades of conventional wisdom on sustainable weight loss.

Yet Jobling’s experience also has altered his perspective on dieting. He now sees obesity as a disease that requires medical intervention, not just behavioral changes. In fact, he thinks he will need to stay on a drug like Wegovy for the rest of his life even though it has taken some of the joy out of eating.

Address of this article:http://poland.chongwenmenhotelbeijing.com/article-37e199858.html

Popular

Russian theater director and playwright go on trial over a play authorities say justifies terrorism

VOX POPULI: Voters won’t forget ‘politics of oblivion’ in the next election

Chinese comedy group punishment sends chills through arts sphere

VOX POPULI: Unlike Taylor Swift, few stars in Japan speak out about politics

'The Apprentice,' about a young Donald Trump, premieres in Cannes

Artificial intelligence found to be 'superior to biological intelligence'

China's 'core socialist values' daubed on a London wall inspire war of words

VOX POPULI: Seven years on, the Moritomo Gakuen scandal still unexplained

LINKS