Some of the best things you can do are to ask any family member or friend in the room to step out.
Then while you discuss their weight tell them there are many ways to lose weight and get in shape. Recommend a gym to them and some healthy snacks that you know of. Also, tell them eating a meal before they go to sleep is at most times bad for their health.
I hope I've answered your question!
Answer: Teach students more about the specifics of bullying.
Explanation: Teach more about cyberbullying, subtle bullying, isolation and ostracism, tell students to reach out and not downplay their situation, teach people to stand up even if they are unconfident or are not sure they are in a bullying situation, teach about being an upstander as opposed to a bystander
I'm not sure if there is a for sure answer for this, so I can only give my personal opinion.
The truth is if you care, you care. You can't really help that. There will be times where caring makes things unimaginably harder while other times, it makes you even stronger. The only real times where caring gets in the way is when you possibly lose a patient, or if you know you're going to. The only thing you can do is remind yourself that you are doing the best that you can/did the best that you can. If you know deep in your heart that you did everything you could possibly do, yes it will still hurt, but you will be able to forgive yourself and move on.
Perhaps there is no one dying, but caring about someone and seeing them hurt is difficult? Just take comfort in knowing that you are the one there to help heal them.
Hope this helps. :)