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In this episode, I explain the connection between depression and weight gain, emotional eating, anxiety, trauma, and obesity. Many patients blame themselves for gaining weight, but weight gain is not always about willpower, diet, or exercise. Sometimes it is a mental health symptom that needs proper care.
I start with the story of Tommy, a patient who came to me wanting to lose a significant amount of weight through exercise and healthy eating alone. While those lifestyle changes are important, his story reflects a much larger issue in healthcare. Too often, obesity is treated as a simple matter of self control, while the emotional and psychological factors driving weight gain are ignored.
I discuss how obesity and depression are deeply connected. Studies show that people living with obesity are significantly more likely to struggle with depression, anxiety, and emotional distress. One of the biggest missing pieces in many weight loss conversations is emotional eating, which often becomes the bridge between untreated mental health conditions and excess weight gain.
In our practice, we take a more comprehensive approach. We use tools like the PHQ 9 and GAD 7 questionnaires to screen for depression and anxiety because understanding a patient’s mental health is often essential to understanding their weight gain. When patients gain large amounts of weight from their baseline, we do not only look at calories and exercise. We also explore stress, trauma, emotional health, relationships, work pressures, and the life events that may be contributing to overeating.
I also share the story of another patient, Brandon, whose progress changed dramatically after he started working with our psychiatric nurse practitioner and therapist. Once the mental health side of the problem was addressed, his weight loss became more consistent and sustainable.
This episode is a reminder that obesity is not simply about food. Weight gain can be tied to depression, anxiety, trauma, chronic stress, emotional eating, and untreated mental health conditions. Patients deserve compassionate, evidence based care that looks at the whole person, not just the number on the scale.
If you recognize these patterns in your own life, talk to your primary care doctor and ask about mental health screening, therapy, or other forms of support. The best long term outcomes often come from combining psychotherapy, lifestyle changes, medical support, and when appropriate, medication.
💡 Start your journey today with Maryland Primary Care & Wellness
Book your consultation: https://www.maryland-primarycare.com/
We tackle the health topics no one else wants to touch
—From obesity and high blood pressure
—To emotional eating and medication resistance
—To cultural myths that keep people sick
My mission is to deliver evidence-based truth—no sugarcoating, culture-aware, and guided by medicine.
© Dr Albert Takem
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