When you look at the key action statement around the AAP recommendations, you see that they don't differ significantly from what's been recommended in Canada. They talk about monitoring and detecting early departure from healthy weight trajectories, and when that's detected, they have a conversation about fundamental behavioural changes. That's nutrition. That's physical activity. It's looking at stigma. It's looking at mental health. Those are the bedrock foundations.
They also talk about—and I don't want to go into too much doctor jargon here—looking for comorbidities, about looking for things like hypertension, high blood lipids, sleep apnea and that sort of thing. Those are common both north and south of the border.
What's getting a lot of publicity are the recommendations around pharmacological interventions and also around bariatric surgery. My own perspective on this—and I think the Canadian practice guidelines will also reflect this—is that those are important steps for adolescents who are really suffering from, say, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, metabolic syndrome and those sorts of things. That is kind of a last-ditch effort.
With the promising advent of the GLP analogues—Wegovy, Ozempic and that sort of thing—to me that would be an opportunity for health care providers to intervene not with an irrevocable step like bariatric surgery but with pharmacology. However, that's down the road.
As I did mention earlier in my comments, the unique aspect of Canada compared to the U.S. is that we do have a chance for some significant regulatory intervention on a national level. Restricting the marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages to kids would help diminish the consumption of these products, which are strongly linked with overweight and obesity. Taxing sugar or sweetened beverages can be done on a national level. We have a progressive mindset here. Physical activity can be increased on a national level as well.
I think there are things that we can do upstream, hopefully, to decrease the need for something as drastic as bariatric surgery.