

Bias Against Bodies: Medical fatphobia can have life-or-death consequences
Advocates say barriers to care can be far more harmful than fatness itself.
We’re taught from a young age that fatness and weight gain are inherently unhealthy. But research shows being fat is not itself unhealthy, and anti-fat bias is immeasurably harmful to our health. The Health At Every Size framework of care presents solutions.
Reset digs into the barriers fat people face in medicine — and how that impacts every other part of their lives.
GUESTS: Dr. Kate Johnson, interim chair of psychiatry at Loyola University
Marquisele Mercedes, writer and doctoral student at Brown University’s school of public health
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Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons


Bias Against Bodies: Medical fatphobia can have life-or-death consequences
Advocates say barriers to care can be far more harmful than fatness itself.
We’re taught from a young age that fatness and weight gain are inherently unhealthy. But research shows being fat is not itself unhealthy, and anti-fat bias is immeasurably harmful to our health. The Health At Every Size framework of care presents solutions.
Reset digs into the barriers fat people face in medicine — and how that impacts every other part of their lives.
GUESTS: Dr. Kate Johnson, interim chair of psychiatry at Loyola University
Marquisele Mercedes, writer and doctoral student at Brown University’s school of public health