My
weight in 1960 was really unbearable. I had touched 220 lbs. I
would get out of breath walking uphill to my residence on Peddar
Road. I was also suffering from bronchial asthma, which added
to the trouble and made matters worse.
Then
I decided to reduce weight and my then teacher, late. Dr.Murzban
Motashaw, guided me properly. When I succeeded and reduced my
weight, and maintained it for four years, I opened an obesity
clinic in 1964. This was perhaps the first obesity clinic in India.
At
that juncture, everybody beleived that dieting meant starvation
and exercise is the only solution for obesity, not realising that
strenuous exercise may damage the heart and the weight bearing
joints, which are already overburdened in an obese individual.
For it is calculated that 14 kg. extra weight doubles the load
on the heart and the body.
I
have beleived, practiced and preached at every opportunity that
dieting is not synonymous with starvation and it is the caloric
density of diet that needs to be reduced, not necessarily the
quantity. Of course, a judicious combination of diet, exercise
and lifestyle modification is required for successful weight loss
and maintenance. Over the years, people have eventually recognized
that obesity is a disease and has to be treated scientifically.
Nevertheless, significant challenges remain to be addressed.
It
is generally believed that in India only undernutrition is rampant
and obesity is rare occurrence. This is far from truth as a year
2000 national survey showed that 25% men and 36% women above 20
years of age were overweight. It is disconcerting that in 1995 19
million indians had diabetes and the number rose to 31 million in
2000. Obesity has a tremendous medical, social and economic impact
on individuals and society as a whole. The prevalence of this chronic
disease is likely to rise further unless concerted efforts are made
at individual and social and environmental levels to treat and prevent
obesity. To make matters worse, like cancer, obesity suffers from
a relative lack of effective treatment. Quacks take advantage of
this and try to steer away people from legitimate medical treatment.
In addition, medical schools
curriculum does not emphasize training in nutrition and related
conditions. Therefore, multipronged approach is required to manage
obesity, which will include the expertise of a team of health care
professionals such as physicians, dieticians, exercise physiologists,
psychologists and surgeons. This prompted the need to bring the
health care professionals together to fight this epidemic.
Thus,
AI AARO was founded to:
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Bring
healthcare professionals from various expertise and backgrounds
together under one umbrella for treating obesity more effectively. |
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To
provide a forum for disseminating up to date scientific information
to health professionals and people. |
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To
fight quackery by informing people and health professionals
about obesity. |
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To
provide a forum to encourage research in obesity. |
Since
the inception of All India AARO, six obesity camps were held to
detect and treat obesity. Five conferences were held in 2002, 2003,
2005, 2006 and 2007.
A
six weeks obesity management course was held in 2003 from 6th March
through April. It was on 6 sundays to facilitate doctors and dieticians
to attend. The response was very good. One hundred registrants attended
this course. We continue to receive eager enquiries for the next
course very frequently.
Effective
fight against increasing prevalence of obesity will require more
and more trained doctors and other health care professionals involved
in weight management. But since obesity and its treatment are receiving
a step-motherly treatment from the authorities in position, All
India AARO is trying to setup a chair in weight management in the
university to train doctors for the job, who would treat obesity
scientifically. The requirements would be a generous sponsor and
the desire to improve the cirriculum, which though is a dream today,
will be realized with the concerted efforts of all concerned.
So
the task before AI AARO is:
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To
establish a postgraduate diploma in weight management and
later a degree in the same, which will ensure proper treatment
of future obese patients. |
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Offer
frequent lectures and seminars. |
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Conduct
camps to detect obesity incidence in different areas. |
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Start
new chapters nationwide and not restrict to Mumbai alone. |
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Offer
weight management training courses. |
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To
work with the news media to help people select the wheat from
the chaff. |
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Encourage
eating places to offer low calorie foods options. |
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To
establish funds that could be provided as seed money for various
deserving research projects in the field of obesity. |
All
these are really Herculean tasks and AI AARO, should be able to
achieve it by and by; and I trust it will come up to the mark as
the old guard is giving way to new and energetic managing committee
members. The path is daunting, but the AI AARO team is ready to
take on the challenge. For the new managing committee emerges with
Dr. Ramaben Vaidya as the president and Dr. Ramen Goyal, Dr. Shashank
Joshi our indefatiguable members along with others.
I
want to thank my colleagues and past and present members of the
managing committee who provided their selfless support, and countless
numbers of voluntary hours to shape AI AARO during its early formative
years. I wish the new managing committee, and our members good luck
in their efforts to carry the baton. I am glad that my asthma proved
to be really a blessing in disguise. |