Association for Weight & Size Inclusive Medicine (AWSIM)
As many of you are all too aware, up until now, there has been no formal medical “home” for medical practitioners of weight/size inclusive care. We’ve all needed to use a patchwork approach to discuss clinical cases, or refer patients to providers of safe, body-affirming care. We haven’t had a place to find official weight-inclusive guidelines or resources for our patients, and our own learning. Realizing that the only way forward was to bring together this community and create this organization ourselves, Dr. Lisa Erlanger arranged a meeting with other weight-inclusive physicians, and AWSIM was born.
Mission
We are an international medical organization working to advance weight-inclusive care. We challenge the pathologization of body size, which continues to drive healthcare disparities and disproportionately harm larger bodied patients. By providing mentorship, education, and advocacy, our organization serves as the professional home for physicians practicing and learning about weight-inclusive care. We envision a world where patients of all sizes have access to empathetic and evidence-based health care.
Vision
We envision a world where patients of all sizes have access to empathetic and evidence-based health care.
Principles
Principle 1: Access to equal care at any size
Everyone deserves equal access to high-quality, non-pathologizing, evidence-based medical care regardless of body size. Access to medical spaces, equipment, treatments, and procedures should not be limited by body size, weight, or a trial of weight loss.
Principle 2: Adequate Nourishment
Everyone, at any weight, deserves nourishment. Medical providers should recognize that food serves many purposes beyond nutrition, including satisfaction, social connection, and cultural expression. Providers without weight-inclusive nutrition training should refer to qualified dietitians or resources for any medically indicated diet counseling. Providers should be wary of dietary recommendations that restrict calories or food groups, as long-term data supports intuitive eating. Medications whose main purpose is to decrease net calorie absorption contribute to malnutrition.
Principle 3: Pathologization of Body Size
There has always been natural diversity in human bodies. The designation of “obesity” as a disease in and of itself is not supported by current evidence when analyzed with a non-biased, scientific, and long-term lens.
Principle 4: Patient Autonomy
Everyone deserves the right to choose which, if any, health behaviors or interventions they wish to prioritize at any given time, without judgement or limitation of care from their health care provider.
Principle 5: Informed Consent
It is the responsibility of the health care provider to provide the patient with unbiased informed consent when recommending treatment options. This is of particular importance when discussing interventions that intend to decrease a patient’s body weight.
Principle 6: Health and Body Size
Healthcare providers should not assume behaviors or health status based on a patient’s body size alone. Healthcare providers should, however, recognize that larger bodies have been marginalized in medicine, and take active steps to reduce, and where possible, reverse these harms – this includes both within direct patient care settings, and in medical education and research.
Principe 7: Weight Stigma and Weight Bias
Healthcare providers should recognize that weight stigma and weight bias are prevalent in both medicine and society, and that becoming a weight-inclusive practitioner requires critical reflection on internalized biases and beliefs.
Principle 8: Centering the experiences of the most marginalized
Weight-inclusive care benefits patients of all body sizes. However, the primary focus of our efforts to advance weight-inclusivity should prioritize the patients who experience the most harm and marginalization due to their body size and intersecting identities, including but not limited to race, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, and disability.
Principle 9: Body Liberation
AWSIM supports providers and patients in the pursuit of body liberation. This includes the right to live an empowered life in their current body, free of shame and stigma, and free from social and political systems of oppression that designate certain bodies as more worthy, healthy, and desirable than others.
Principle 10: Critical Analysis of Research
At the time of publication of these principles, there is no evidence supporting safe, sustainable, and long-term weight reducing interventions that improve health outcomes. All clinicians, scientists, and researchers involved in weight-related research should design their studies, analyze their data, and create guidelines with the same scientific rigor applied to other areas of medicine and science. AWSIM will continue to review evidence that may challenge the statement above with a non-biased lens.
Why Join Now?
- Your membership gets you early access to members only resources including case consultation and on demand webinars, as well as the opportunity to shape our organization.
- All membership fees and donations will be used to build our fabulous infrastructure, and launch our first year of programming. We are an all volunteer board!
