Studies Suggest GLP-1 Medications May Help Slow Progression of Some Cancers

GLP-1 medications have become widely known for their role in treating type 2 diabetes and supporting weight loss. Now, emerging research suggests these drugs may offer another important benefit: helping slow the progression of certain obesity-related cancers, as well as breast cancer.

A new study presented at the 2026 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) found that patients taking GLP-1 receptor agonists after a cancer diagnosis experienced significantly lower rates of cancer progression and death compared to patients taking other diabetes medications.

GLP-1 receptor agonists, which include medications commonly prescribed for diabetes and obesity management, have attracted growing scientific interest in recent years. Researchers have increasingly explored whether the drugs’ effects extend beyond controlling blood sugar and promoting weight loss.

According to Dr. Marcin Chwistek, chief of supportive oncology and palliative care at Fox Chase Cancer Center and an ASCO expert in supportive care, GLP-1 medications may influence several biological pathways linked to cancer development and progression. Researchers believe the drugs’ anti-inflammatory and immune-regulating effects could play a role in improving outcomes for cancer patients.

What the studies found

The research team analyzed health records from more than 12,000 patients diagnosed with one of seven obesity-related cancers at stages 1, 2, or 3. The investigators compared patients who began taking GLP-1 medications after their cancer diagnosis with similar patients who were treated with a different class of diabetes drugs known as DPP-4 inhibitors, or gliptins.

The results were notable. Patients using GLP-1 medications showed a meaningful reduction in cancer progression across several solid tumor types. The strongest benefits were observed among patients with lung, breast, colon, and liver cancers. In these groups, patients taking GLP-1 drugs were approximately 38% to 50% less likely to develop stage 4 or metastatic disease compared with those receiving alternative diabetes treatments.

The study also found that GLP-1 use was associated with a 33% lower risk of death from any cause. Among all cancer types examined, breast cancer patients appeared to experience the greatest survival benefit. Researchers reported that GLP-1 users with breast cancer had a 45% lower risk of death compared to similar patients taking other diabetes medications.

These findings suggest that the medications may have an impact not only on cancer progression but also on overall survival.

Scientists are still working to understand the mechanisms behind these results. One possibility is that GLP-1 medications help reduce chronic inflammation, which has long been linked to both obesity and cancer development. Inflammation can create an environment that supports tumor growth and spread.

Researchers also point to the drugs’ effects on the immune system. By influencing immune responses, GLP-1 medications may help the body better control cancer progression.

Weight loss itself may also contribute to improved outcomes, since excess body weight is a known risk factor for several types of cancer. However, additional research will be needed to determine exactly how these medications may influence cancer biology.

The study has been presented at ASCO’s annual meeting but has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. Research presented at scientific conferences often undergoes additional review and validation before becoming part of standard medical practice.

Another study found that women who used GLP-1 medications had a significantly lower risk of developing breast cancer than those who did not use the drugs. The study reviewed health data from more than 110,000 women ages 45 to 80 and found that GLP-1 users were about 30% less likely to be diagnosed with breast cancer. The findings were also presented at the 2026 ASCO annual meeting by Dr. Elizabeth McDonald of the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and were simultaneously published in JCO Oncology Practice.

Dr. McDonald said:

GLP-1 medications are intriguing from a cancer research perspective because they weren’t designed for cancer therapy, but they do affect many different targets and pathways associated with cancer development, so we’re eager to study them in this context.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “GLP-1 Meds May Help Slow the Spread of Certain Obesity-Related Cancers,” HealthDay, 5/27/26
Source: “GLP-1s May Reduce Metastatic Progression of Certain Obesity-Related Cancers,” ASCO, 5/21/26
Source: “GLP-1 use linked to lower breast cancer incidence in large cohort study,” PennMedicine.org, 6/2/26
Source: “GLP-1 Agonists Are Associated With a Significant Reduction in Breast Cancer Incidence in Women,” JCO Oncology Practice, 6/2/26
Image by Darina Belonogova/Pexels

Mutual Demolition Society

Seventy years ago, the American public loved a catchy tune whose lyric proclaimed, “We belong to a mutual admiration society.” The song celebrated a romantic relationship where each partner vied to outdo the other in proving their devotion.

Today, as Childhood Obesity News has mentioned more than once, our way of life embraces and encourages a “mutual demolition society,” where obesity and poverty tirelessly compete to see which one of them can do the most damage. Obesity leads to poverty, and as surely as night follows day, poverty leads to obesity, in a futile reciprocal see-saw effect that shows no sign of improving any time soon.

Ongoing folly

It has been argued for years that the medical profession and several government agencies waste a ton of resources in the service of a (mistaken) belief that gathering the Body Mass Index statistics of children is the ultimate road toward solving the childhood obesity problem. However, this view is not shared by all scientists in the field.

In 2014, Rodney Steadman wrote,

The BMI has become a big problem for some researchers… BMI does not accurately measure body fat in individuals with a high level of lean body mass (body weight minus the fat) and some ethnic groups. Furthermore, the BMI can be difficult to calculate in field settings when body weight cannot be accurately measured.

Meanwhile, parents who simply did not care for the whole idea argued with schools, and some challenged the ultimate usefulness of BMI information. As the Toronto Sun described in 2015, cultural and economic factors are involved:

[…] BMI information alone may not be enough to help parents in high poverty areas where fresh produce and safe playgrounds to encourage exercise may not be available.

Around the same time, a study found that BMI measurement failed to identify “as many as 25% of children, age 4 to 18 years, who have excess body fat.” The Mayo Clinic’s director of preventive cardiology, Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, said, “BMI is not capturing everybody who needs to be labeled as obese.”

And if they pass…

If someone is officially labeled obese, what then? That person now holds the credential of eligibility for bariatric surgery.

Leaving all other factors aside for the sake of discussion, it is possible to question the benefit of bariatric surgery overall. It cannot be considered a societal good to have a large proportion of society’s members absorbed by the overwhelmingly intense preparation agenda for an operation like this.

In contrast to even a limited public existence, the mundane routine of a person gearing up for, or recovering from, this type of procedure is not easy. For practical purposes, like holding down a job, the patient may be quite unable to conduct anything like a normal life.

However much of a blessing it may be in a particular case, in the long run, for that person, bariatric surgery is a very life-consuming project in terms of burning up time, energy, goodwill, money, and other resources.

Then, after the actual procedure, there is a similarly unproductive spell, as the patient is, to a greater or lesser degree, disabled for a considerable period of time. Even barring any unexpected side effects, there are new routines to learn and new norms to become accustomed to, on every side.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Teresa Brewer ‘Mutual Admiration Society’ on The Ed Sullivan Show,” YouTube.com, undated
Source: “Absurd, but True,” WordPress.com, 07/15/14
Source: “Screening teens for obesity may not help them lose weight,” TorontoSun.com, 07/03/15
Image by geralt/Pixabay

Early-Life Junk Food Rewires the Brain

A growing body of research continues to show that what children eat can have lifelong consequences. Now, a new study published in Nature Communications suggests that eating a high-fat, high-sugar junk food diet during early life may permanently alter the brain’s appetite and reward systems, increasing the risk of overeating well into adulthood. The findings offer new insight into how childhood nutrition affects long-term health and reveal that the gut microbiome may hold the key to reversing some of the damage.

Researchers investigated how consuming a high-fat, high-sugar diet early in life impacts eating behaviors later on, even after switching to a healthier diet in adulthood. The study found that early exposure to junk food can leave a lasting imprint on the brain, essentially rewiring hunger and reward pathways in ways that persist over time.

Perhaps most concerning, the changes remained even after the subjects returned to a healthy weight and healthier eating patterns. This suggests that the effects of poor childhood nutrition go beyond temporary weight gain and may fundamentally influence how the brain regulates appetite.

One of the study’s most striking discoveries was that males and females responded differently to the unhealthy diet. Researchers found that females appeared to be more vulnerable to the long-term effects of junk food consumption. In females, the diet reduced leptin receptors in the brain.

Leptin is a hormone responsible for signaling fullness and helping regulate food intake. When leptin signaling is disrupted, the brain may struggle to recognize when enough food has been consumed, increasing the likelihood of overeating.

The unhealthy diet also interfered with how females processed essential amino acids such as tryptophan and arginine, which play important roles in mood, metabolism, and brain function. Males, on the other hand, experienced disruptions in immune-sensing pathways and steroid metabolism, showing that junk food can affect biological systems differently depending on sex. These findings may help researchers better understand why some individuals are more susceptible to obesity and eating disorders later in life.

While the long-term brain changes linked to junk food are concerning, the study also uncovered a promising possibility: targeted gut microbiome therapies may help reverse some of the damage. Researchers successfully used both probiotics and prebiotics to improve eating behaviors and restore gut-brain communication pathways.

Probiotics, including Bifidobacterium longum, appeared to directly reduce overeating behaviors while causing minimal disruption to the existing gut ecosystem. Meanwhile, prebiotics helped improve the overall gut environment and supported healthier communication between the gut and the brain.

The findings reinforce the growing understanding that the gut microbiome plays a major role in mental and physical health. Often referred to as the “gut-brain axis,” this communication network connects digestive health with brain function, appetite regulation, mood, and metabolism. Researchers suggest that targeting the microbiome could potentially serve as a “reset button” for unhealthy eating patterns that begin in childhood.

There are several reasons why limiting junk food during childhood is so important. One is nutritional deficiencies. Children require vitamins, minerals, protein, fiber, and healthy fats to support proper physical and cognitive development. Diets dominated by processed foods often fail to provide these essential nutrients, potentially impacting growth, immunity, and brain development.

Another reason is the increased risk of weight gain and obesity. Then there are effects on learning and behavior, as research has linked diets high in sugar and unhealthy fats with poorer concentration, mood swings, and behavioral difficulties in children. Let’s not forget dental health problems. Sugary snacks and beverages can increase the risk of cavities and tooth decay. Since children’s teeth are still developing, frequent exposure to sugary foods can have lasting consequences for oral health.

Finally, children who regularly consume junk food may become less interested in healthier options like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and lean proteins. These habits can continue into adulthood, increasing the risk of chronic disease over time.

As scientists continue exploring the connection between nutrition, the gut, and the brain, one message is becoming increasingly clear: What children eat today may influence their health and eating behaviors for decades to come.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Childhood Junk Food May Rewire The Brain For Life, Reveals Study,” NDTV.com, 5/28/26
Source: “Bifidobacterium longum and prebiotic interventions restore early-life high-fat/high-sugar diet-induced alterations in feeding behavior in adult mice,” Nature Communications, 2/24/26
Source: New Study Discovers That a Junk-Food Diet Rewires the Brain,” Inc.com, 5/24/26
Image by Tara Winstead/Pexels

More on Additives and Advertising

Weird stuff inside the food, and enticing, persuasive words about the food: Both in their own distinctive ways are responsible for the overwhelming wave of obesity that has engulfed society.

Actually, nowadays, words are pretty superfluous, except to identify where to get the stuff. People who sell just about anything tend to rely mainly on pictures to do the convincing for them. Matters in that realm are definitely advancing. Still, in certain situations, like in cars where they are not supposed to have their attention fixed on screens, people are still quite able to be influenced by words alone.

When it comes to pouring enormous amounts of money into the economy, visual and auditory stimuli both play their parts. Every little purchase of a convenience-store doughnut, glimpsed by someone who just went in there to pay for gas, performs its role in the overall ascendency of food.

Or maybe automotive fuel has nothing to do with it. Maybe somebody pulled off the highway after listening to a radio advertisement for McDonald’s. Even if this isn’t Mickey D’s place, the ad has elicited hunger pangs in the driver, who is not taking any chances on the odds of spotting yellow arches any time soon. He or she will happily chow down on whatever they can get right now.

Children grow up to be that driver, and that driver produces more children who will take after him or her. They become accustomed to hearing constant demands that they drop whatever they are doing, and lay their hands on something that can be quickly conveyed to their mouths. Like devout zombies, they hear and obey.

Two for the price of one

The bizarre chemicals added to food and the words said about food both play their parts to account for enormous expenditure by individual members of the public. Additionally, we pay even more via the government agencies and bureaus that exist to try to stem such evils as the damage caused by obesity.

All these financial demands could be alleviated by more widespread awareness and a stronger resolve on the part of the public to do something about them. There is no need to arm ourselves with pitchforks, like the townsfolk in an old-time monster movie. We are not asked to roam beneath a full moon to hunt down the entrepreneurs who make and peddle the chemicals, or the ad agency moguls who sell us sugar and bright colors and substances that could only with the most lavish addition of imagination be described as nourishing.

One way for members of the public to effectively react would be to band together, raise our voices, and demand that the government Do Something. Of course, as always, when the government is asked to, or assumes the right to, intervene in the sale of a product or service, differences of opinion may arise.

For instance, when any market commodity is in short supply, should the government allow another company to also sell it? For how long? But what if Company B offers it to customers at a lesser price than Company A, the one that invented the stuff and holds the patent on it? Should the government then intervene again, and put a stop to that seemingly unfair practice? After all, it was that first corporation that hired all the scientists and bought all the test tubes so the product could be deemed fit for consumption.

However, in the business world, “shortage” has more than one meaning. There may be a worldwide shortage of titanium, for instance, because mining companies can’t locate accessible deposits of it in the earth, or dig it up fast enough to meet the demand.

But — the ingredients of GLP-1 agonists are not as rare as titanium. In manufacturing those drugs, the unavailability of the raw materials is not a factor. Any company that can lay its hands on the raw materials can make some. They just can’t sell it unless the government says okay. However, critics believe that to prevent them from doing so — in order to give one pharmaceutical giant a monopoly — is wrong.

This is why Thomas L. Knapp wrote the accusatory article, “Semaglutide: Artificial Shortage is Novo Nordisk’s Business Model.” The fact that other companies — if allowed — can whip up a batch of the same potion any day of the week, and sell it at a fraction of Novo Nordisk’s price, looks like a conspiracy against the vast public who clamor for medication that helps them lose weight without losing the deed to the house, their kids’ college funds, and great-grandma’s wedding ring.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Semaglutide: Artificial Shortage is Novo Nordisk’s Business Model,” TheGarrisonCenter.org, 02/10/26
Image by kaboompics/Pixabay

Another Junky Year

To look back a year into U.S. history does not promote a warm, fuzzy feeling of nostalgia, but rather something closer to revulsion. Toward the end of May in 2025, New York Times reporters Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Dani Blum told readers that a recent presidential commission had just painted a “bleak picture of American children.”

They discussed what the government was saying, doing, and not doing, about a list of conditions and circumstances affecting childhood obesity — like ultra-processed foods; stress; insufficient exercise; drugs, including antidepressants; and exposure to chemicals that either are or should be avoidable to varying degrees.

Perhaps unwilling to recall the tremendous effort that former First Lady Michelle Obama had exerted to bring awareness to the problem, the 68-page commission mentioned the word “obesity” only three times, although it divulged the information that 40% of Americans were obese. Also, Americans were getting pretty much half their calories from ultraprocessed foods (UPFs). This is a real head-scratcher, and maybe above our pay grade, but… could there possibly be a connection?

Regardez-vous les autres…

Meanwhile, compare three European countries — France, Italy, and Portugal — where the citizens obtain only between 10% and 30% of their calories from UPFs. Reader, prepare for a shock: only fewer than one-quarter of those folks qualify as obese.

Anyway, about a year ago, a presidential commission led by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. issued a report that included the phrase, “the sickest generation in American history.” The officials who were expected to identify the reasons for that found plenty. A case was made that this country’s medical research establishment has been placing too much emphasis on eradicating specific diseases.

Historically, in many cases, that has been proven possible, yet somehow a feeling seems to exist that more energy should be expended on treating illnesses and identifying their causes, rather than trying to eliminate them from the biosphere altogether. Why there should be any controversy over this point is difficult to understand. We are America. Why not boldly aspire to do it all?

Do corporations exert too much influence on policy?

Probably, folks of any political persuasion would agree that corporations are too powerful in this aspect of life, differing only in their assessment of which corporations have too much influence, and of what sort, and what ought to be done about it.

In fact, upon first hearing, most generalizations sound pretty much the same. Two people might agree that American children are over-medicalized, and at the same time operate from very divergent sets of assumptions and beliefs.

Anyone may read the entire MAHA report. It says unkind things about topics also discussed here at Childhood Obesity News, like the diets of American children, which are rife with such engineered substances as ultra-processed fats, grains, and sugars. This dreck makes up two-thirds of their total caloric intake.

The authors note that Mr. Kennedy is happy with neither America’s food system nor its plethora of environmental toxins. Various of his viewpoints are contrary to those favored by his supporters, while many of his thoughts also disagree, as might be expected, with other opinions and beliefs.

2,500

By a strange coincidence, the report issued in 2025 included a very similar figure — 2,500 — which happens to be the number of dicey, or at least questionable, additives found in what the kids are eating these days. The strange brews include “emulsifiers, binders, sweeteners, colorings, and preservatives” with names like Propylparaben, Butylated Hydroxytoluene, and Titanium Dioxide, which (whether honored with capital letters in their names or not — it seems to be optional) do not look or sound attractive.

According to the report,

Studies have linked certain food additives to increased risks of mental disorders, ADHD, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndromes and even carcinogenic effects. Additionally, preliminary evidence suggests a possible association between the consumption of food colorings and autism…

Many substances also disrupt the gut microbiome, which increasingly appears as vitally important as the brain. It is possible that parents who worry about their kids sustaining brain damage through drug use might appropriately be just as concerned over potential gut microbiome devastation from some of those 2,500 food additives.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Kennedy and Trump Paint Bleak Picture of Chronic Disease in U.S. Children,” NYTimes.com, 05/22/25
Source: “The MAHA Report,” US-Gov-West-1, 2025
Image by Pat Hartman/Pixabay (Squirrel_photos, JohnHain)

People. Just. Don’t. Care.

Quite recently, Childhood Obesity News examined the phenomenon of breakfast cereals. Among 1,200 examples in this one product class, only a very small percentage of the choices — when judged by sugar content — are deemed acceptable, or even eligible for consideration, by a conscientious expert in any scientific discipline.

So, why do people buy the stuff? And in the wider field of all available groceries, why do they scarf down so many tons of dreck, festooned with ludicrous amounts of salt?

In the realm of total disregard for the human body’s actual needs, sugar, salt, and fat are the unholy trinity of devastation. By no means, however, do they represent the extent of the problem.

Food industry “engineers the confusion”

Dr. Josephine Connolly-Schoonen, a highly-placed medical professional with Stony Brook Medicine, defends the seemingly oblivious public by opining that “the food marketplace is very confusing, and that’s not by accident.” Others familiar with the situation might disagree. Even moderately concerned consumers with limited spare time to do research can easily learn which types of breakfast cereal contain elevated levels of bad stuff, and jot a little note to themselves titled “Don’t buy.”

As the wise old saying goes, it’s not rocket science. Considering the overall importance of vetting the stuff that kids eat every day, the price of self-education is not overwhelming. Information about sugar content in a particular brand of cereal is easily available and does not change with dizzying frequency like some other purported facts. In the vital knowledge department, this stuff is a pretty easy “set it and forget it” variety of data.

Your cereal journey

Reserve a morning to consult a source that has studied these queries for years, like Consumer Reports or JAMA Network. Choose several brands containing the least offensive kinds and amounts of crap, and limit your purchases to those. Trust us, your kindergarteners are not going to call an Uber and set off on a shopping trip. You are a grownup, a citizen, a parent, and totally in control of this situation to an extent probably not experienced in any other area of life. Learn to identify the bad stuff, and don’t buy it. Figure out the good stuff, and buy it.

Put on your grownup cloak of sophisticated discrimination and choose a brand, or several. Or skip the tacky breakfast chow and feed the kids eggs and fruit and stuff. Or get some plain, inoffensive cereal and experiment with harmless substances to put in it, or on it.

Pull your cold cereal game up a notch by raiding your fridge and pantry for creative toppings that add flavor, color, texture, and… dare we even hope? Some actual nutrition.

Handle this challenge not just because you are a thoughtful, considerate parent with no desire to aid and abet the obesity of your children. Step up and take care of the issue for the sake of your own mental health. In a place and time where we increasingly are made to feel powerless, grab hold of this seemingly modest yet incredibly effective opportunity to enjoy a meaningful amount of autonomy over a vitally important realm of existence.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “American Breakfast Cereals Are Becoming Less Healthy, Study Finds,” NYTimes.com, 05/21/25
Source: “Nutritional Content of Ready-to-Eat Breakfast Cereals Marketed to Children,” JAMANetwork.com, 05/21/25
Source: “Best Breakfast Cereals From Consumer Reports’ Tests,” Consumer Reports, 01/17/22
Source: “Breakfast Cereal Hacks to Build a Better Bowl10/24/24,” MomsKitchenHandbook.com, 10/24/24
Image by Pexels/Pixabay

Rethinking the “Adiposity Rebound”

For decades, doctors and researchers have relied on a concept known as the “adiposity rebound” to help explain childhood growth patterns and predict future obesity risk. But new research is now challenging that long-standing belief, suggesting that the rise in body mass index (BMI) seen in early childhood may have far less to do with body fat than previously thought.

The findings, presented by Andrew Agbaje at the European Congress on Obesity and published in The Journal of Nutrition, argue that the so-called adiposity rebound may actually reflect healthy muscle and lean tissue development rather than an increase in fat mass.

What is the “adiposity rebound”?

The adiposity rebound theory dates back to 1984, when French researcher Marie Françoise Rolland-Cachera and colleagues described a predictable pattern in childhood BMI growth. Typically, BMI rises rapidly during infancy, declines through the preschool years, and then begins increasing again around ages 4 to 6. Researchers believed this second rise, the “rebound,” represented a return of body fat accumulation.

Over time, studies suggested that children who experienced this rebound earlier in life were more likely to develop obesity during adolescence and adulthood. As a result, the timing of adiposity rebound became widely discussed in pediatric health and obesity prevention. Many clinicians viewed an early rebound as a warning sign that could justify lifestyle interventions focused on diet, physical activity, and weight management.

Why researchers are questioning the theory

According to Prof. Agbaje, the problem may lie in relying too heavily on BMI as a measure of body fat. BMI is a simple calculation based on height and weight, but it cannot distinguish between fat, muscle, bone, and other lean tissues. This limitation has long been recognized in adults, especially among athletes or muscular people whose BMI may appear elevated despite having low body fat levels.

Dr. Agbaje argues that the same issue may exist in children. He says:

Puberty is a defining moment in human biology that alters the whole body, but adiposity rebound is not; it is a natural growth process unattached to any problem, whether it is early rebound or late. So the previous associations relating early BMI-based adiposity rebound to later life obesity are misleading analyses. Positive statistical associations do not always equate to biological plausibility.

New evidence points to lean mass growth

To explore what is really happening during early childhood growth, researchers examined data from 2,410 children and adolescents between ages 2 and 19 using information from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), dated 2021-2023.

Instead of focusing only on BMI, the study also analyzed waist circumference-to-height ratio (WHtR), which researchers say is a more accurate indicator of body fat distribution. The results showed a striking difference between BMI patterns and WHtR patterns.

While BMI followed the familiar trajectory, declining in early childhood before increasing again, WHtR continued to decrease for several years and never returned to the higher levels seen during toddlerhood. Researchers say this finding suggests that the BMI rebound is not actually driven by increasing fat mass. Instead, it may reflect healthy gains in muscle, lean tissue, and overall body development.

In other words, what many experts once viewed as a warning sign of obesity could actually represent a normal and beneficial stage of growth.

A “body composition reset”

Dr. Agbaje describes this period as a kind of “body composition reset” that helps prepare children for later stages of development. Rather than indicating excess fat gain, the increase in BMI after early childhood may simply reflect the body building strength, muscle mass, and lean tissue needed for continued growth.

This interpretation could dramatically change how clinicians view childhood BMI trends. For years, some interventions attempted to delay or alter adiposity rebound in hopes of reducing future obesity risk. However, Dr. Agbaje points to long-term clinical trials that found dietary interventions did not change the timing or pattern of BMI rebound. That may be because the process is not a disease mechanism at all.

The study also adds to growing discussions about the limitations of BMI as a health tool. Researchers increasingly argue that BMI alone may oversimplify body composition, especially in children whose bodies are constantly developing.

Waist-to-height ratio, by contrast, may provide a clearer picture of unhealthy fat accumulation because it focuses more directly on central body fat. Dr. Agbaje believes WHtR could become a more useful screening tool for identifying excess fat in children and adolescents moving forward.

What this could mean for parents and pediatricians

The findings do not suggest that childhood obesity is unimportant or that healthy lifestyle habits should be ignored. Instead, the research highlights the importance of accurately understanding normal growth and avoiding unnecessary concern over biological processes that may simply reflect healthy development.

If future studies confirm these findings, it could reshape how pediatricians evaluate childhood growth patterns and obesity risk. Rather than treating early BMI rebounds as a condition requiring intervention, experts may begin focusing more on overall body composition, activity levels, nutrition quality, and long-term metabolic health.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Scientists Say a 40-Year-Old Childhood Obesity Warning May Be Completely Wrong,” SciTechDaily, 5/15/26
Source: “Early Adiposity Rebound and the Risk of Adult Obesity,” AAP.org, 3/1/98
Source: “Effects of 20-year infancy-onset dietary counselling on cardiometabolic risk factors in the Special Turku Coronary Risk Factor Intervention Project (STRIP): 6-year post-intervention follow-up,” The Lancet, May 2020
Source: “Waist-circumference-to-height-ratio had better longitudinal agreement with DEXA-measured fat mass than BMI in 7237 children,” Nature.com, 3/5/24
Source: “Adiposity Rebound or Fat-Free Mass Anabolism in Children—Challenging a 42-Year-Old BMI Puzzle with Waist-to-Height Ratio: The ASNF-NNF 2025 Inaugural Flemming Quaade Award for Innovation in Childhood Obesity Lecture,” The Journal of Nutrition, May 2026
Image by Los Muertos Crew/Pexels

Cherished Belief Bites the Dust — Or Not

Bats are blind; seeing red infuriates a bull; freezing prolongs battery life; rice can dry out a wet cell phone? No way.

When Columbus set sail, people believed the Earth was flat, and the Jonestown Massacre victims were killed by poisoned Kool-Aid. Nope.

Does marijuana cause users to “get the munchies” and consequently grow obese? It ain’t necessarily so, because grass “could actually have surprising effects on your waistline,” as Lester Black recently reported for SFGATE.

This news emerged from work done at the University of California, Riverside. The subjects of these experiments were not humans, but mice, whose metabolisms were remarkably affected by ingesting concentrated cannabis oil, with results that included weight loss.

Say whut?

Prof. Nicholas DiPatrizio led a team in tinkering with molecules, as researchers will often do in efforts to bend nature to our will. They obtained results that encouraged them to believe this is only the beginning of a totally unexpected series of beneficial discoveries.

At first, this all sounds as heretical as believing that the sun rises in the west. Everyone knows the correct answer is east.

But it only rises in the east because humans decided to give that name to the sunrise side of the sky. If we had named it “west” instead, that is where the sun would absolutely rise.

Only, it doesn’t rise at all. That is only another myth, one that was eventually debunked when people finally figured that the sun stays in relatively the same place, while the Earth actually revolves. In defining scientific truth, many factors are involved.

Anyway, the scholars obtained some obese mice and divided them into two teams. Some were fed an isolated form of THC, while others received cannabis oil containing “a broad spectrum of cannabis compounds.”

Head to head

Both teams lost some weight, but “the outcomes differed noticeably on other metabolic functions.” The THC mice “still had impaired metabolic function that mirrored diabetes.” The cannabis oil mice “saw their metabolic function return to normal.”

Obviously, much work remains to be done, but the expectation exists that “targeting this widespread system could unlock new therapies.” Some products are already on the market, resulting from earlier work done by other researchers. For example,

Tetrahydrocannabivarin, a natural cannabis compound shortened to THCV, has been shown to cause reduced appetite and increased stimulation.

Of course, Dr. DiPatrizio’s team specifies, just because a new discovery looks promising when tested on animals, there are no guarantees about eventual human benefit. No guarantees, but plenty of hope that obesity and/or diabetes in humans will eventually be defeated by new discoveries. Meanwhile, the scientists involved in the quest are feeling the intoxication that may match or exceed any sensation available from cannabis.

Are they a bunch of deluded hallucinators? Not hardly! According to a recent Cleveland Clinic page, medical marijuana is already in use for more than 20 medical conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma, Tourette syndrome, intractable pain, and the list goes on.

Many questions remain about why cannabinoids can do what they do, and also why different people react in unexpected ways. Factors include age, genetic predisposition, gender, dosage, method of consumption, possible conflict with other meds, and more.

But the verdict so far is that the gains outweigh the difficulties. Another problem, of course, is getting the law on the appropriate side of any issues that are involved.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “15 Common Science Myths and Misconceptions — Busted,” RD.com, undated
Source: “13 Widely Believed History Myths,” BuzzFeed.com, 3/23/26
Source: “New Calif. study finds evidence cannabis could treat obesity, diabetes,” SFGATE.com, 05/14/26
Image by Erin Hinterland/Pixabay

More on the Psychology of Fat

As we have noted more than once, there are oddities about how obesity has been regarded in different places and at various points in history. In some parts of the world, civilization has entered a phase where, rather than causing people to be emaciated, a shortage of money could (against all logic) make them fat. Today, low-income people are sold a plethora of products filled with more fattening ingredients than nutritious ones.

In the Middle Ages, to be fat and to have fat wives and heirs was way cool, a power move, a proud public assertion of worthiness, and a self-declaration of importance that was widely accepted as such, regardless of the thoughts of any lower members of society.

In the present day, a big waistline might mean either wealth or poverty. In circumstances where the wealthy are viewed as greedy parasites, to call such a person fat is an insult. At the same time, in any societal environment where the poor are viewed as undeserving sub-humans who eat up all the taxes that are unfairly extracted from the wealthy, to be called fat is an equally potent insult when hurled at them.

The vagaries of earthly life

Some people enter the world with blue eyes. Others are born deaf. Some emerge from the womb left-handed. And some arrive with a genetic predisposition to obesity — or are thrust into circumstances which (for them, anyway) will make it inescapable.

Skip ahead four decades. In which of those situations, after 40 years of existence, is a human most apt to be mocked, ridiculed, disrespected, scorned, rejected, vilified, blamed, or shamed? Which of those conditions is most likely to cause a grown adult — who may be successful, and even fulfilled, in one or more aspects of normal life — to seek help from a mental health professional? Obesity, of course.

Plus, the lack of choice

Another factor here is that while a person may quite readily have the freedom to choose between being left-handed and wealthy, or left-handed and impoverished, other situations are not so amenable, and obesity is one of them. In the past few years, advances have been made in this area of knowledge, to the point where more people realize that obesity can definitely influence a person’s prospects, and even lead them into a life of relative financial deprivation.

A typical citation comes from the journal BMJ Open:

Studies suggest that the obese are more likely to be perceived as lazy, unsuccessful, weak-willed and undisciplined. On basis of these negative stereotypes, the obese face various weight penalties in the labour market, which include higher job insecurity, lower chances for a job and general discrimination.

Along with many other sources, that one has noted the mutual disadvantages of being both fat and broke:

[L]ower income is associated with higher levels of psychosocial stressors which include decreased control over life, and higher insecurity, social isolation, stress and mental disorders.

[T]he stigmatization of the obese also correlates with material (ie, less income through weight penalty), behavioral (ie, change in health-promoting behavior through discrimination), as well as psychosocial factors (ie, self-stigma may inflict lower control over life, social isolation, stress, lower self-esteem) that may, again, lead to a higher risk of obesity.

One reason why such individuals seek counseling is to escape the curse of self-stigmatization, which all too readily transmogrifies into psychological malfunction. It’s bad enough to have other people metaphorically beating you up, but when you start doing it yourself, the situation really calls for intervention.

(To be continued…)

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Income and obesity: what is the direction of the relationship?,” BMJ.com, January 2018
Image by Kaz_Graphics/Pixabay

CDC Updates Its Childhood Obesity Facts

Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released its childhood obesity facts, updated with some recent research data. While there are no shocking revelations to be glimpsed, especially by the readers of this blog, it’s always useful to try seeing the big picture backed up by reliable research. The numbers reveal a growing issue that touches nearly every part of society. No big surprise there, either. Here are some highlights (or, shall we say, lowlights).

Obesity in numbers

Between 2017 and March 2020, obesity affected 19.7% of children and adolescents in the United States. That translates to approximately 14.7 million young people between the ages of 2 and 19. For children, obesity is measured using Body Mass Index (BMI), with obesity defined as having a BMI at or above the 95th percentile for a child’s age and sex.

The climbing rates

One of the most concerning trends is how obesity rates increase as children get older. Among children ages 2 to 5, the obesity rate was 12.7%. However, the percentage climbed significantly among older age groups, reaching 20.7% for children ages 6 to 11 and 22.2% for adolescents ages 12 to 19. These statistics suggest that unhealthy habits and lifestyle challenges may intensify as children grow older, making early intervention especially important.

Racial and ethnic disparities

The data also highlights major disparities among racial and ethnic groups. Hispanic children experienced the highest obesity prevalence at 26.2%, followed closely by non-Hispanic Black children at 24.8%. In comparison, obesity rates were 16.6% among non-Hispanic white children and 9.0% among non-Hispanic Asian children. These differences point to broader social and environmental factors that can influence access to nutritious food, safe places to exercise, healthcare resources, and education about healthy living.

Obesity by gender

Gender differences also appear within these statistics. Among girls, obesity rates were highest in non-Hispanic Black girls, with nearly one-third affected. Among boys, Hispanic boys experienced the highest obesity prevalence at 29.3%. These patterns demonstrate that childhood obesity does not affect all groups equally and that targeted community-based solutions may be necessary.

Family income

Family income plays a significant role as well. Children from lower-income households were more likely to experience obesity than those from higher-income families. Obesity affected 25.8% of children living at or below 130% of the Federal Poverty Level, compared to just 11.5% of children from families earning more than 350% of the poverty level. Financial limitations can make it harder for families to purchase healthier foods, participate in recreational activities, or access preventive healthcare services.

Healthcare costs

Beyond the physical health concerns, childhood obesity also creates a major financial burden. Healthcare costs related to obesity among U.S. children reached an estimated $1.3 billion annually in 2019 dollars. On average, children with obesity incurred $116 more in medical expenses each year compared to children with healthy weight. For children with severe obesity, those costs rose to $310 more per year. These expenses reflect increased medical visits, treatments, and long-term health risks associated with obesity-related conditions.

It takes a village

Addressing childhood obesity requires a collaborative effort from families, schools, healthcare systems, and policymakers. Encouraging healthy eating habits, increasing opportunities for physical activity, improving access to affordable nutritious foods, and supporting preventive healthcare can all play a role in reducing obesity rates. While the statistics are serious, they also provide an opportunity to focus on meaningful solutions that can improve the health and well-being of future generations.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Childhood Obesity Facts,” CDC, 5/6/26
Source: “National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2017–March 2020 prepandemic data files development of files and prevalence estimates for selected health outcomes,” National Health Statistics Report, 2021
Source: “Association of body mass index with health care expenditures in the United States by age and sex,” PLOS One, 3/24/21
Image by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, via Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain

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Profiles: Kids Struggling with Weight

Profiles: Kids Struggling with Obesity top bottom

The Book

OVERWEIGHT: What Kids Say explores the obesity problem from the often-overlooked perspective of children struggling with being overweight.

About Dr. Robert A. Pretlow

Dr. Robert A. Pretlow is a pediatrician and childhood obesity specialist. He has been researching and spreading awareness on the childhood obesity epidemic in the US for more than a decade.
You can contact Dr. Pretlow at:

Presentations

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the American Society of Animal Science 2020 Conference
What’s Causing Obesity in Companion Animals and What Can We Do About It

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the World Obesity Federation 2019 Conference:
Food/Eating Addiction and the Displacement Mechanism

Dr. Pretlow’s Multi-Center Clinical Trial Kick-off Speech 2018:
Obesity: Tackling the Root Cause

Dr. Pretlow’s 2017 Workshop on
Treatment of Obesity Using the Addiction Model

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation for
TEC and UNC 2016

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the 2015 Obesity Summit in London, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s invited keynote at the 2014 European Childhood Obesity Group Congress in Salzburg, Austria.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2013 European Congress on Obesity in Liverpool, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2011 International Conference on Childhood Obesity in Lisbon, Portugal.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2010 Uniting Against Childhood Obesity Conference in Houston, TX.