STOp Obesity

The STOP Obesity Alliance provides in-depth research and analysis on the barriers preventing people from achieving healthy weight-loss goals. Additionally, the Alliance policy recommendations are geared to help strengthen systems that will help address the obesity crisis.

Costs Driving Employer Action Against Obesity

The STOP Obesity Alliance has revealed findings from a national survey conducted by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago in conjunction with The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services. The survey found that employers are concerned about obesity-related health costs and that there is a need to do more to support employees in preventing and reducing obesity.

To view survey findings click here.

STOP Obesity Alliance Letter to Senate Finance Committee

In response to efforts in the U.S. Senate to develop legislation that would halt a scheduled reduction in physician payments under the Medicare program and make other needed Medicare improvements, the STOP Obesity Alliance sent a letter to Senators Max Baucus and Charles Grassley strongly encouraging these Senate leaders to include in the Medicare package a demonstration program to provide coverage for interventions to help address overweight and obesity among Medicare beneficiaries.

View full letter here.

STOP Obesity Alliance Policy Recommendations

Recommendation One: Re-Vision Success

Explore the use of a five to ten percent sustained reduction of current weight as the appropriate measure of success for the purpose of determining whether treatment interventions and innovations are effective.

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Recommendation Two: Encourage Innovation and Multifactorial Interventions to Strengthen the System of Care for Overweight and Obesity

Aggressively explore multifactorial interventions that can achieve a five to ten percent sustained weight loss for those whose condition has not been successfully addressed solely by nutrition and physical activity and for whom bariatric surgery is not an option. Motivate payers, insurers and employers to encourage innovation around these treatments and disease management.

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Recommendation Three: Address and Reduce Stigma as a Barrier to Improving Health Outcomes

Cultivate a positive environment by promoting awareness and open discussion among health professionals, opinion leaders, role models (e.g., parents, teachers, coaches) and the public of the harmful impact of stigmatizing people with overweight and obesity and promote interventions that provide support for sustained weight loss and go beyond recognizing the role of personal responsibility.

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Recommendation Four: Broaden, Intensify and Coordinate the Research Agenda for Obesity

Encourage an interdisciplinary research environment that addresses the obesity epidemic as a result of a complex interplay of biological, genetic, behavioral, cultural, environmental, social, policy and economic factors.

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Re-Visioning Success: How Stigma, Perceptions of Treatment, and Definitions of Success Impact Obesity and Weight Management in America

A Research Report for the Strategies to Overcome and Prevent (STOP) Obesity Alliance
By
Anjali Jain, MD
Christy Ferguson, JD
D. Richard Mauery, MS, MPH
Fouad Pervez, MPH
Mark Gooding, BA

The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services, Department of Health Policy

November 2, 2007

Affecting nearly two-thirds of adults, overweight and obesity is one of the most significant public health threats facing America. This research for the Strategies to Overcome and Prevent (STOP) Obesity Alliance* authored by the Department of Health Policy at The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services examines what may contribute to the disconnect between the scientific data demonstrating the harmful health and economic effects of overweight and obesity and the insufficient action to change the public and private sector systems that form barriers against effective weight management.

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The content on these web pages is intended for educational and informational purposes only and is not designed to replace medical advice or professional medical services. The information should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your physician. Medical decisions should be made in consultation with your qualified health care provider. There may be variations in treatment that your health provider may recommend based on individual facts and circumstances.