Are you kidding me? Yes, there is an obvious bias in society towards obese people. Especially among doctors, studies have shown obese patients receive LESS care than other patients and the care they do receive is sub-par, when in actuality they should be receiving MORE care to help combat obesity. I am considered obese, yet I am still applying to medical school. My health problems are one of the reasons I have wanted to become a doctor. I am not hailing obesity as 'lifestyle' it is UNHEALTHY, I fully 100% realize this, but this is not an over night thing I can change, in fact several factors are beyond my control. I have been misdiagnosed twice for two different disorders and it took over 8 years to be correctly diagnosed. I was dismissed by countless physicians who thought I was a lazy person who stuffed fried food, cheeseburgers and what not into my mouth every day, all day long. Yet the complete opposite was true, however no one took the time to actually figure out what was wrong! If all you people are wanting to be physicians and you cannot sympathize with your patients and think they are lazy and fat then why the heck are you going into healthcare? I feel my situation is going to give me that edge in UNDERSTANDING what my patients are going through. Losing weight, especially when factors are stacked against you (genetics, disorders, medications causing weight gain, etc), is probably the hardest thing I have ever done and it is a LIFE TIME BATTLE!!
Get off your soap boxes people. You look at obesity as the worst thing in the world, and yes it is horrible for your body, but how many doctors smoke, drink, have unprotected sex, or participate in "dangerous" sports (mountain climbing, rafting, horseback riding, 4-wheeling, etc). Any number of those things can kill you or cause serious injury. There are so many programs out there to help you stop smoking or drinking, but name ONE program to help you lose weight....that is FREE. My husband's employer has two stop-smoking programs, plus free counseling for drinking and smoking, but NOTHING for overcoming obesity.
When you grow up in a household that enjoys food and eating, with parents who are also overweight, it is nearly impossible to develop good eating habits. Give obese people a break, there are so many factors that go into obesity. If it were just as easy as stop eating food or start exercising, more people would be thinner. If you were lucky enough to grow up in a household that exercised and ate in moderation, kudos to you....I wasn't. I did overcome my background and maintained a healthy weight for 5+ years until I developed my disorders and since then it has been a living hell for me. It is easy to stop smoking, you can quit totally, but you cannot live without food. To learn to eat in MODERATION is ridiculously hard, especially with the culture we live in where "bad" food is every where and in everything!
I feel sorry for the obese patients who will come your way looking for help and all they will get is you guys judging them. Do you realize that if I wanted to be judged I would go look in the mirror, because that is what I do every damn day! I love it when fellow students or professors judge me based upon my looks and I crush any misconceptions they have based upon the thought "fat people are stupid". When I get the highest score in the class or tell people I have a mater's degree and going for a second bachelors degree and applying to med school, they look at me like "you?".
Saying that obese people shouldn't be doctors is ridiculous....that's like saying someone with cavities shouldn't be a dentist or someone who wears glasses shouldn't be a opthamalogist or a dermatologist shouldn't have acne. C'mon people! The next time you see someone who is obese, look beyond the weight and realize the daily struggle we deal with. Maybe it isn't just as simple as someone who eats too much food. Also realize that just because I am obese now, doesn't mean that I'm not trying like hell to become healthy. I only hope my life struggles and experiences will make me a better doctor that will help my patients....ALL my patients....to become healthier.