Link between obesity and COVID-19 may not be what it seems
Obesity is frequently cited as a risk factor for severe COVID-19, but the role of weight bias and discrimination in that risk demands further investigation, according to Dr. Yoni Freedhoff, an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Ottawa and medical director of the Bariatric Medical Institute in Ottawa.
“Are these outcomes truly a consequence of physiology? Or is there something else at play?” Freedhoff questioned at the 2021 Canadian Obesity Summit.
There is no doubt that people with higher body mass index (BMI) suffer worse outcomes from COVID-19. One metanalysis that pooled data on more than 399,000 people with COVID-19 found that those with obesity were 113% more likely to be hospitalized, 74% more likely to need intensive care and 48% more likely to die than those with lower BMIs.
Researchers have attributed this increased risk to a constellation of physiological factors—from weakened immune responses due to chronic inflammation, to breathing problems and other conditions that often accompany obesity like Type 2 diabetes.
Yet, according to Freedhoff, “we also know there is a precedent for people with obesity being systematically managed differently during a pandemic”—a potential factor in worse outcomes that research and media reports often overlook.
During the H1N1 pandemic a decade ago, people with obesity appeared to have a much higher risk of severe or fatal complications from infection—that is, until researchers took a closer look at the treatment they received.
As it turned out, “patients with obesity were less likely to receive early antiviral treatment,” Freedhoff explained. When researchers controlled for that disparity, the difference in complications “disappeared.”
“People with obesity were discriminated against systematically, whether it was conscious, unconscious, implicit or explicit,” Freedhoff said. “Could this be happening with COVID-19?”
People with higher BMIs who have faced weight bias or discrimination from health workers in the past may delay seeking care for symptoms of COVID-19, Freedhoff explained. Meanwhile, there’s a dearth of information on the interventions and timeliness of the care they receive compared to other patients with COVID-19.
“I would love to see this more formally investigated because there is plausibility and precedent to suggest the possibility of bias,” Freedhoff told CMAJ. “Did they receive steroids later? Were they proned less frequently? Were they admitted [to hospital or intensive care] in later stages of the disease?”
For example, “when it comes to people with severe obesity, proning might not have been completed at the same rate or at all” given staffing challenges and the number of people required to properly position patients with higher BMIs, Freedhoff said. Yet, patients with obesity and acute respiratory distress may benefit more from the intervention that patients with lower BMIs.
Freedhoff also argued that media reports have overemphasized obesity as a risk factor for severe COVID-19 relative to other risks. He noted that people with a BMI between 30 and 35, also known as class I obesity, face comparable risks to those with chronic heart or lung disease, cancer and dementia, and lower risks than those associated with being older than 50, Black or South Asian.
According to Freedhoff, fear-mongering rhetoric does not help people and exacerbates the stigma that many already face. One study published in the International Journal of Obesity in 2015 found that news articles that frame fatness as negative increased anti-fat beliefs in readers.
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