Younan Nowzaradan, MD, F.C.A.S
General & Vascular Surgeon
How Y'All Doin?
If you have landed on this page and are prepared to spend five minutes reading my note, then I am confident that you care about your health and you are ready to make the neccessary changes to improve it.
Long before I became a doctor, I saw what happens when people do not get the help they need. Where I grew up, healthcare was not always available when people needed it, and I saw how much suffering that caused. I saw people wait too long, struggle longer than they should have, and sometimes run out of options.
That stayed with me. It is a big part of why I chose this path.
Over the past forty years, I have dedicated my life to treating obesity, often in its most extreme and complex forms. I was among the first surgeons willing to operate on patients over 600 pounds—people who had
been told there were no options left. At that time, many of these cases were
considered too high-risk or simply impossible.
But I did not accept that. I have always believed that if someone is willing to fight for their life, then we should be willing to help them. That mindset has guided my work ever since, from pioneering surgical
approaches to developing practical, real-world methods that patients can actually follow.
What I have learned through all of this is something very simple. Most people are not lacking information. They are struggling with applying it.
Today, there are more diets, programs, medications, and products than ever before. Science has advanced, and that is a good thing. We now have tools that did not exist even ten years ago, including medications
like GLP-1s that can help people lose significant weight. These are important developments, and when used correctly, they can be very effective. But they are still tools.
They are not a cure, and they are not a replacement for change.
I see many people believing they have found a long-term solution in a short-term intervention. The reality is that when the medication stops, the weight often comes back if nothing else has changed. Without
structure, without habits, and without accountability, no treatment will hold
over time.
That is the difference between temporary results and lasting change. Because the body responds to what you do consistently, not what you try for a short period of time.
That is why I often say the scale does not lie. It is not judging you. It is reflecting your actions over time. If something is not working, then something needs to change. Not perfectly. But honestly.
Over the years, I moved away from complicated approaches because complicated does not work in real life. What people need is structure they can follow when they are tired, stressed, busy, or discouraged. They need something that works outside of a clinic, in their everyday life.
That structure comes down to a few fundamentals: controlling portions, eating real food, having a plan, paying attention to your habits, and being consistent over time. These are not new ideas, but they are the reason real results happen.
I have seen this work in the most difficult cases imaginable. I have treated thousands of patients, including many who were facing life-threatening obesity, and I have seen people take their lives back step by step. I have also seen what happens when they do not.
The difference is never just the plan. It is whether the person commits to change.
And I have never given up on a patient who is willing to try. No matter how difficult the situation, I believe people deserve the chance to improve their health and their lives.
Today, there are many products and programs that promise results without requiring that level of commitment. I understand why that is appealing, but I have also seen where it leads. If the underlying behavior does not change, the results do not last. That is why I am careful about what I stand behind.
If something carries my name, it has to be built on real science, real experience, and real outcomes. It has to support the habits that lead to better health, not try to replace them. Whether it is medical treatment, nutrition, or supportive products, everything should work together toward the same goal: helping people take control of their health in a way that lasts.
Because there is no single solution. Real change comes from combining the right tools with the right structure and the willingness to do the work.
At the end of the day, this is not just about weight. It is about your life. Your ability to move, to function, to take care of yourself, and to be there for the people around you.
I have seen people reclaim that. And I have seen what happens when they do not. That is why I continue to do this.
Everyone deserves the chance to improve their health. But it starts with honesty, responsibility, and consistent action.
Because in the end, that is what makes the difference.
Sincerely,
