Your Privacy is Important to us

We encourage you to review our Terms of Service, and Privacy Policy.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click "Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information" link in the footer of this page.

Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

We won't sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.

Continue on TOI App
Open App
Login for better experience!
Login Now
Welcome! to timesofindia.com
TOI INDTOI USTOI GCC
TOI+
  • Home
  • Live
  • TOI Games
  • Top Headlines
  • India
  • City News
  • Photos
  • Business
  • Real Estate
  • Entertainment
  • Movie Reviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Elections
  • Web Series
  • Sports
  • TV
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Events
  • World
  • Music
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • Tech
  • Auto
  • Education
  • Log Out
Follow Us On
Open App
  • ETIMES
  • CINEMA
  • VIDEOS
  • TV
  • LIFESTYLE
  • VISUAL STORIES
  • MUSIC
  • TRAVEL
  • FOOD
  • TRENDING
  • EVENTS
  • THEATRE
  • PHOTOS
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • MOVIE LISTINGS
  • HEALTH
  • RELATIONSHIP
  • WEB SERIES
  • BOX OFFICE

7 myths about obesity that need to be left behind

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - May 31, 2026, 20:49 IST
Comments
Share
1/9

Myths about obesity

Obesity is one of the most misunderstood health conditions in the world. Not because the science is unclear. The science is actually quite clear. The problem is that decades of cultural messaging, bad diet advice, and institutional bias have buried that science under a pile of assumptions that feel true but are not. Here are seven of the most persistent ones in my experiences building the weight loss program.

2/9

Myth 1: Obesity Is a lifestyle choice


This is where most misconceptions begin, and it does the most damage. Obesity involves a complex interplay of genetics, hormonal regulation, gut microbiome function, sleep patterns, stress biology, and environmental factors. People do not choose their genetic predisposition to weight gain any more than they choose their height. Two individuals eating the same food and exercising the same amount can have dramatically different weight outcomes based on biology alone. Framing obesity as a personal choice delays medical care and replaces treatment with judgment.


3/9

Myth 2: Just eat less and move more


If this advice worked reliably, obesity would not be a global health crisis affecting over one billion people worldwide according to WHO data from 2024. The eat less, move more instruction ignores the hormonal reality of hunger, the body's metabolic adaptations during caloric restriction, and the neurological mechanisms that drive food-seeking behaviour. It is not wrong as a direction. It is deeply insufficient as a treatment plan for a chronic medical condition.

4/9

Myth 3: Willpower is the missing ingredient


Hunger is not a motivation problem. It is often a hormonal state driven by ghrelin, leptin, insulin, and cortisol, among other signals that operate largely below conscious control. When the body's hunger hormones are dysregulated, as they often are in obesity, telling someone to simply try harder is not clinical advice. It is a way of shifting blame. Sustained weight management requires addressing the biological mechanisms driving hunger, not repeatedly testing a person's resolve against them.

5/9

Myth 4: If you are not visibly heavy, you do not have a problem


Visceral obesity, where fat accumulates around internal organs rather than under the skin, carries serious metabolic risk and may not be visible externally. This is particularly relevant for South Asian populations, who carry significant cardiovascular and metabolic risk at BMI levels that standard charts classify as normal or overweight. Body weight is an incomplete picture. Waist circumference, body composition, and metabolic markers together tell a more accurate story.

6/9

Myth 5: Weight lost always stays lost


The body actively defends its highest sustained weight through mechanisms that include increased hunger signalling and reduced resting metabolic rate after weight loss. This is not a failure of discipline but a documented physiological response. Research consistently shows that most people who lose significant weight through diet alone regain a substantial portion within three to five years. This is why ongoing medical management, rather than episodic dieting, is the appropriate clinical response to obesity as a chronic condition.

7/9

Myth 6: GLP-1 Medications are taking the easy way out

Semaglutide and tirzepatide are serious, evidence-based pharmaceutical interventions that work by modulating the body's appetite and metabolic hormones. The clinical trial data behind these medications is among the strongest ever generated for obesity treatment. Patients using GLP-1 therapy under proper medical supervision are not bypassing hard work. They are finally receiving treatment that addresses the biological reality of their condition rather than fighting their own hormones without support.

8/9

Myth 7: Obesity is not a real medical condition

The World Health Organisation, the American Medical Association, and major endocrinology bodies globally classify obesity as a chronic disease associated with over 200 comorbid conditions including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnoea, and several cancers. It requires structured, long-term medical management, the same as any other chronic condition. The stigma attached to obesity is a barrier to that care, and it belongs in the past.

9/9

What should people know?

Understanding obesity accurately is the first step toward addressing it effectively. The myths listed here are not just incorrect. They are actively harmful to the people carrying the weight of them.

Saloni Paliwal (Co-founder & COO, Voy India (Formerly known as EarlyFit)

Start a Conversation

Post comment
Photostories
  • From a Bakrid invite to murder: Inside the Ghaziabad teen stabbing case
  • 6 types of litchi available in India and how to pick the sweetest one at the market
  • From T. Rex to Spinosaurus: Meet the most terrifying dinosaurs to ever walk the earth, dominating the prehistoric world with unmatched size, strength, and hunting power
  • Kriti Sanon is serving flirty luxe with emerald envy in this Rs 67,000 designer mini dress for ‘Cocktail 2' promotions
  • Juhi Chawla’s son Arjun to Ananya Panday’s sister Rysa Panday: Celebrity kids who marked major academic milestones in 2026
  • 7 factors making India’s coastal towns real estate investment hotspots
  • Archana Puran Singh’s son Aaryamann gives a glimpse of his new approximately Rs 50 crore house in Madh Island; he shares an important update
  • 5 surprising ways yoga changes your mind and soul (not just your body)
  • From Seals to Whales: 7 animals that produce thickest milk on earth
  • Heatwave hacks: A complete survival plan for India's scorching summer
Explore more Stories
  • 8
    From T. Rex to Spinosaurus: Meet the most terrifying dinosaurs to ever walk the earth, dominating the prehistoric world with unmatched size, strength, and hunting power
  • 8
    From Seals to Whales: 7 animals that produce thickest milk on earth
  • 9
    Heatwave hacks: A complete survival plan for India's scorching summer
  • 11
    10 best toy and miniature dog breeds that make wonderful family pets
Up Next
  • News
  • /
  • Etimes
  • /
  • Wellness
  • /
  • 7 myths about obesity that need to be left behind
About UsTerms Of UsePrivacy PolicyCookie Policy

Copyright © May 31, 2026, 08.52PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service