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THE HUNGER GAME

BBC Science Focus

|

June 2024

Obesity is on the rise, but as we blame our unhealthy food-ridden environment and look to wonder drugs to get rid of unwanted fat, what role do our genetics play?

- GILES YEO

THE HUNGER GAME

Iam a geneticist, which, last time I checked, is a perfectly upstanding profession. I mean my mother-in-law still speaks to me, so that must be a good thing, right?

And yet, when I reveal that I study the genetics of body weight and that your genetics can be the driving cause of obesity, I become a bad person. I'm perceived as giving overweight or obese people terms I don't use in a pejorative fashion - an excuse.

This has always been an interesting take for me. If I were studying something else, like the genetics of cancer, dementia, arthritis or any other disease, would I suddenly be giving the people who are suffering from those conditions an excuse? I'd hope not. Instead, I hope that people would understand that I'm trying to understand biology and mechanisms, and, shocking I know, I might even be trying to help some of them.

IT'S IN THE GENES

When we talk about body weight, it's all too often considered to be a matter of lifestyle', a habit, a lack of willpower, a choice. The reality is that while rapid changes in our food environment and lifestyle have undoubtedly driven up the obesity figures worldwide, there are many people who are skinny and others who aren't. There's clearly a large variation in body weight, even in the 'obesogenic' environment we live in today (one that promotes weight gain). A large part of this, although by no means all, is down to genetics.

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