- Heindel, Jerrold;
- Alvarez, Jessica;
- Atlas, Ella;
- Cave, Matthew;
- Chatzi, Vaia;
- Collier, David;
- Corkey, Barbara;
- Fischer, Douglas;
- Goran, Michael;
- Howard, Sarah;
- Kahan, Scott;
- Kayhoe, Matthias;
- Koliwad, Suneil;
- Kotz, Catherine;
- La Merrill, Michele;
- Lobstein, Tim;
- Lumeng, Carey;
- Ludwig, David;
- Lustig, Robert;
- Myers, Pete;
- Nadal, Angel;
- Trasande, Leonardo;
- Redman, Leanne;
- Rodeheffer, Matthew;
- Sargis, Robert;
- Stephens, Jacqueline;
- Ziegler, Thomas;
- Blumberg, Bruce
On September 7 and 8, 2022, Healthy Environment and Endocrine Disruptors Strategies, an Environmental Health Sciences program, convened a scientific workshop of relevant stakeholders involved in obesity, toxicology, or obesogen research to review the state of the science regarding the role of obesogenic chemicals that might be contributing to the obesity pandemic. The workshops objectives were to examine the evidence supporting the hypothesis that obesogens contribute to the etiology of human obesity; to discuss opportunities for improved understanding, acceptance, and dissemination of obesogens as contributors to the obesity pandemic; and to consider the need for future research and potential mitigation strategies. This report details the discussions, key areas of agreement, and future opportunities to prevent obesity. The attendees agreed that environmental obesogens are real, significant, and a contributor at some degree to weight gain at the individual level and to the global obesity and metabolic disease pandemic at a societal level; moreover, it is at least, in theory, remediable.