Beyond Pharmacotherapy: Understanding the Links between Obesity and Chronic Mental Illness

Author:

Taylor Valerie H1,McIntyre Roger S2,Remington Gary3,Levitan Robert D4,Stonehocker Brian5,Sharma Arya M6

Affiliation:

1. Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario; Associate Professor, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

2. Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Pharmacology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario; Head, Mood Disorders, Psychopharmacology Unit, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario

3. Deputy Director, Research and Education in the Schizophrenia Program, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario; Professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

4. Senior Scientist and Research Section, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

5. Assistant Clinical Professor, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta

6. Professor of Medicine and Chair in Obesity, Research and Management, University of Alberta, Royal Alexandra Hospital, Edmonton, Alberta

Abstract

While differences in weight-gain potential exist, both between and within classes of psychiatry medications, most commonly used atypical antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and antidepressants result in some degree of weight gain. This is not new information and it requires an understanding of the tolerability profiles of different treatments and their goodness of fit with specific patient phenotypes. However, this iatrogenic association represents only a piece of this obesity–mental illness dyad. The complex interplay between psychiatric illness and weight involves neurobiology, psychology, and sociological factors. Parsing the salient variables in people with mental illness is an urgent need insofar as mortality from physical health causes is the most common cause of premature mortality in people with chronic mental illness. Our review examines issues associated with common chronic mental illnesses that may underlie this association and warrant further study if we hope to clinically intervene to control this life-threatening comorbidity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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5. Examining Associations Between Women’s Mental Health and Obesity;Psychiatric Clinics of North America;2023-09

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