Drugs such as Ozempic cut our craving for food. But they can’t control our hunger for all the good things in life.
Pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly’s study of its tablet,orforglipron,has raised hopes of an effective and easy-to-use treatment reaching a market dominated by injections.
Some people shed the kilos on semaglutide but regain all the lost weight when they get off the drug. Researchers are working on changing that.
Surgeons are removing up to 10 kilograms of excess skin from patients who have lost major amounts of weight,amid a booming interest in body-contouring operations.
Baboons eat the perfect diet in the wild. There’s one specific “appetite” that could help humans eat well too.
While Ukrainians discover a fate worse than Vlad.
Supplements promising similar results to Ozempic have taken over social media,but the TGA and health experts have concerns.
Fat activist and host of the podcast,Maintenance Phase,Aubrey Gordon,is the subject of a new documentary.
Oprah Winfrey’s abrupt break with WeightWatchers this year pointed to the company’s struggles amid a new generation of weight-loss drugs. Now its Australian arm is taking a hit.
I worry we are becoming so fearful of fat shaming that we won’t confront the full weight of this epidemic.