Keyword: overeating

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  • Obesity is 'deadlier than smoking' and can knock 13 years off your life

    10/16/2007 9:08:48 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 113 replies · 985+ views
    The Daily Mail ^ | October 17, 2007 | Daniel Martin
    Obesity is more dangerous than smoking and will dramatically shorten the lives of millions, a landmark study has found. While smoking reduces life by an average of ten years, the research says being seriously overweight can cut life expectancy by as much as 13 years. The Foresight report, written by 250 leading scientists, says Britain's obesity crisis is so severe that it would take at least 30 years to reverse. If current trends continue, by 2050 about 60 per cent of men, 50 per cent of women and 25 per cent of children in the UK will be clinically obese...
  • Fans get right to be stuffed (Dodgers test All You Can Eat bleacher seats)

    01/11/2007 11:20:08 AM PST · by BurbankKarl · 19 replies · 557+ views
    LA Times ^ | 1/11/07 | Bill Shaikin, Times Staff Writer
    You won't be able to buy a ticket for under $10 on game day at Dodger Stadium next season, but you will be able to pay $40 for a bleacher seat and an endless supply of Dodger Dogs. The Dodgers are converting the right-field pavilion into an all-you-can-eat section. They also are raising the price of the cheapest game-day ticket, in the top deck, from $6 to $10, matching the price in the left-field pavilion. A ticket to the right-field pavilion — at $35 in advance and $40 on game day — will entitle fans to an endless supply of...
  • Intestinal bacteria may explain obesity

    06/13/2006 7:37:40 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 143 replies · 2,724+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 6/13/06 | AP
    ST. LOUIS - The microorganisms that live in your gut could explain one of the sources of obesity, says a new study from researchers at Washington University. Bacteria live throughout the body, but some intestinal bacteria appear to be better than others at helping their hosts turn food into energy, say researchers Buck S. Samuel and Dr. Jeffrey I. Gordon. They believe changing the mix of bacteria in the intestine could influence how much people weigh. Bacteria and archaea, another kind of single-celled organism, are common in the human intestine. Researchers are discovering that together, they help their human hosts...
  • Health costs of obesity exceed smoking and drinking

    06/05/2005 6:14:01 PM PDT · by SheLion · 82 replies · 3,107+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 6-5-05 | Patricia Reaney
    ATHENS (Reuters) - Treating obesity-related disorders costs as much or more than illnesses caused by aging, smoking and problem drinking.  It accounts for 2 percent of the national health expenditure in France and Australia, more than 3 percent in Japan and Portugal and 4 percent in the Netherlands. A review of research into the economic causes and consequences of obesity presented at the 14th European Congress on Obesity showed that in 2003 up to $96.7 billion was spent on obesity problems in the United States. "An increase in the prevalence of obesity increases the healthcare costs," Anne Wolf of the...
  • Chronic overeating called an addiction

    08/14/2004 11:14:23 PM PDT · by neverdem · 19 replies · 590+ views
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES ^ | August 15, 2004 | Joyce Howard Price
    The Washington Times www.washingtontimes.com Chronic overeating called an addictionBy Joyce Howard PriceTHE WASHINGTON TIMESPublished August 15, 2004 Just as federal health officials defined obesity as an illness, researchers at the University of Florida say mounting evidence suggests chronic overeating may be a substance abuse disorder and should be considered an addiction.     "What's the difference between someone who's lost control over alcohol and someone who's lost control over good food? When you look at their brains and brain responses, the differences are not very significant," said Dr. Mark Gold, chief of addiction medicine at UF's College of Medicine.     Dr. Gold,...
  • Stressors of the Christmas Season

    12/22/2003 7:39:15 AM PST · by Theodore R. · 1 replies · 152+ views
    Cheyenne, Wyoming Tribune-Eagle ^ | 12-22-03 | Dynes, Michelle
    Stressors of the season Experts recommend exercise, rest and relaxation to keep holiday headaches at bay By Michelle Dynes rep2@wyomingnews.com Published in the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle CHEYENNE - While Christmas brings to mind nativity scenes, Santa Claus and mistletoe, other people may be thinking of family fights and January bills. The holidays can cause headaches, mostly stemming from added stress. Stressors are defined as anything that causes stress, but these can be positive or negative. Negative stressors around the holidays could be family arguments or money worries. But even things people normally enjoy can cause stress, such as visiting friends or...
  • As patients get supersized, caregivers are learning to cope

    06/01/2003 9:56:16 AM PDT · by sarcasm · 146 replies · 749+ views
    Arizona Star ^ | June 1, 2003 | Bonnie Henry
    You're in distress. Maybe it's a heart attack. Maybe you've blacked out. Here comes the ambulance. Trouble is, you're too big for the gurney. Even worse, you're too big for the ambulance. "Oh my yes, we regularly get 700-pound people in this town," says Joe Gulotta, deputy chief with the Tucson Fire Department. "We can fit a 700-pound person in back of the ambulance, but it's not good," says Gulotta. To do so, they have to strip out the gurney racks in back, place the person on a tarp on the back of the ambulance floor, then use the tarp...
  • Value meals supersize customers - Obesity blamed on fast-food practice

    06/19/2002 11:02:53 AM PDT · by tdadams · 71 replies · 3,190+ views
    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | June 19, 2002 | Stephen Krupin
    Washington --- Fast-food consumers who spend a few extra cents upgrading their value meal also might be supersizing their health risks, a coalition of nutrition organizations said Tuesday. The study by the National Alliance for Nutrition and Activity found that Americans are substantially increasing their calorie and fat intake as chains make it more economical and enticing to order larger serving sizes. The group said the resulting rising rates of obesity, responsible for 300,000 deaths annually, can lead to diseases such as cancer and diabetes. ''Americans are quite literally eating ourselves into an early grave,'' said Carol Tucker Foreman, director...