Ideas about why some long-term health problems are associated with being overweight
We talked with people who had been diagnosed with a variety of long-term illnesses that are associated with weight gain. Weight had often been a...
We talked with people diagnosed with an array of chronic conditions related to weight gain. People were usually aware that weight was a factor in their health condition, whether directly or indirectly. Sometimes it was the management of the health problem that had contributed to weight gain, leaving people feeling unsure what they could do.
Here we look at how people talked about being overweight in relation to living with one or more health conditions and the ‘vicious circles’ that were often involved.
MobilityFor many of the people we spoke to pain, fatigue and weight gain – either alone or in combination – had a serious impact on mobility and lifestyle, including the ability to go out and have a social life. This could lead people to feel lonely, bored or bad about themselves, which, for some, resulted in comfort eating (see also ‘Emotions, emotional eating and self-esteem issues‘).
‘it’s a sort of spiral that you go down because the depression then gets worse and you feel bad about yourselfit’s all too overwhelming, so you can’t do what you know you should do’. Carole John Y referred to a ‘perpetuating circle’ of pain, lack of exercise and weight gain. Others described how pain disrupted their sleep, leaving them tired, which then led to hunger and overeating. Liz said that fibromyalgia left her so exhausted she did not feel able to go to the gym or exercise.
Carole spoke of the ‘vicious spiral’ of depression, multiple sclerosis, eating and weight gain, while Maxine explained that her joints were failing because she was ‘really, really heavy’ while her joint pain prevented her from almost any activity.
Loss of mobility was a specific feature of some chronic conditions, such as osteoarthritis and lymphoedema. Being less mobile impacted on self-care and managing around the house. When Joan was still at work, she had to get up a couple of hours earlier to stand under a hot shower so she could move her joints. Her hands were like ‘claws’ and every morning she used to steep them in hot water to get them moving.Lina said that losing her mobility as a result of multiple health problems and being overweight had made it difficult to do simple things like wash her hair or take her daughter to the park.
Being overweight and its associated mobility problems could present a barrier to exercising, in a variety of ways. People who had enjoyed exercise in the past felt the loss keenly. Carole had given up swimming because of embarrassment, fatigue and a lack of private changing facilities at the pool. Sue Y used to belong to a walking club, but had had to give it up because she couldn’t keep up. She had also had to stop dancing due to a knee operation, but hoped to start this up again. Joint problems and particularly the loss of manual dexterity sometimes made it difficult to prepare food from scratch. Carole, Heidi and Ellie all said they were no longer able to chop vegetables or cook for themselves due to the effects of their health problems. Depression and low moodThe difficulties of living with a chronic condition and being overweight were often linked to low self-esteem, loneliness, feeling useless, depressed and overwhelmed. For example Heidi, who had been diagnosed with mixed connective tissue disease and lung fibrosis, described how the pain of her illness and the weight gain contributed to her very low mood. Carole explained that ‘the weight is linked to depression and the depression is linked with the weight’.
Changes in lifestyle were a common part of living with a chronic condition. For some, their condition led them to give up work, like Alan X and Meeka, who gave up their jobs after having heart attacks. Regardless of when in their life their illness occurred, some of the people we spoke to said they were left questioning why this had happened to them.We talked with people who had been diagnosed with a variety of long-term illnesses that are associated with weight gain. Weight had often been a...
For many of the people we spoke to 'eating is an emotional thing' (Meeka). Changes in weight can have both emotional causes and emotional impacts,...