Lynn McAfee is a person you
want on your side. She is brilliant and dedicated, fearless
and loyal. She speaks with the voice of experience about
what it's like to be a supersize person in our society, and
she inspires her audiences to make changes in themselves and
in their world. She has become an expert on the workings of
the pharmaceutical industry, regulatory agencies such as the
FDA, the FTC, and the NIH, and on the issues of medical
politics and the weight-loss industry.
Lynn has been doing fat
liberation (also known as size acceptance) longer than any
of us. She was part of the Fat Underground, a Los
Angeles-based support group in the late 60's that used
guerrilla tactics to strike at the diet/weight loss
establishment. She and a few others disrupted a class on
"Behavior Modification for Weight Loss" at a local college,
marched up on stage, took the microphone out of the
instructors' hand, and made statements such as:
1. Behavior modification
does not work. Weight lost on a diet will be regained even
with lifestyle changes.
2. No known weight loss
system works, which has been proven in scientific studies.
3. The diet obsession is
part of a conspiracy to keep women feeling bad about
themselves. The fashion industry, the diet industry, the
movie industry, and the food industry all benefit from
women's obsession with thinness.
4. We must rise and stand
against the oppressor and proclaim that all women, of all
sizes, are beautiful.
Although her tactics have
changed, she is still that dynamic. When she talks, people
listen. And just as we are proud to have her on our side,
the companies that manufacture new diet drugs must live in
fear of her wrath.
That's because, as the head
of the Medical Advocacy Project of the Council on Size &
Weight Discrimination, Lynn attends meetings of the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) and the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) concerning the weight loss industry and national
health concerns. She attends and testifies at Federal Drug
Administration (FDA) hearings on new weight-loss
prescription drugs. Her goal is simple: to remind the FDA
that it is their duty to ensure that drugs and treatments
are safe and effective. That simple. To get FDA approval,
drugs must be Safe and Effective.
But it's never simple. The
powers-that-be say that obesity is such an unhealthy
condition that any side effect from a weight-loss drug is
acceptable. So what, they ask, if those who take the drug
have a higher risk of kidney disease, or breast cancer? At
least they'll be thin. Lynn simply says that all new drugs
must meet the standards of safety. If they cause brain
damage or lung disease, they must be kept off the market.
She testified against Redux to no avail, and then, a year
later, the drug caused many tragic deaths and had to be
removed from the market.
Drugs for weight loss must
also be effective. This is how the FDA requires testing for
effectiveness: One control group does diet and exercise for
a few months, and another similar group does the same diet,
the same amount of exercise, but also takes the drug being
tested. Recent new drugs have terrible scores in this area.
People taking the drug lost only 5% more that the group that
didn't take the drug. When you're talking about prescribing
a drug with serious side effects, it really ought to be more
effective at helping people lose weight and keep it off.
Lynn also confronts the
diet industry with her demand for truth in advertising. She
has lobbied tirelessly to ban "before and after" pictures in
weight-loss ads. We all know that virtually every dieter
regains the weight eventually. If the advertisers were to be
honest, they would show "before", "after", and "5 years
later". She organized a campaign to pressure the American
Heart Association (AHA) to remove an offensive television ad
which promoted fear of fat among children and teens.
As a member of an FTC Task
Force, Lynn helped draft guidelines for weight-loss
companies that included-for the first time-requirements that
consumers be told all the costs of the program up front.
Although the guidelines are only suggested rather than
mandatory, this is an important first step toward consumer
protection against the diet fraud that is so widespread in
today's market.
Lynn McAfee is making
inroads, forcing people to look at things with a different
perspective, and truly changing the world and making it a
safer place for those of us who are larger than average. I'm
so glad she's on our side!
Miriam Berg, President,
Council on Size & Weight Discrimination
Read an interview with Lynn
on the Radiance Magazine website. Article is at
http://radiancemagazine.com/truth.html
Read Lynn's article
"Medical Activism is Good For Your Health," also on the
Radiance website, at
http://radiancemagazine.com/medical_activism.html