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31 States Record Increases in Adult Obesity
HealthDay News by way of Forbes ^ | 29AUG06 | HealthDay News

Posted on 08/29/2006 10:59:24 PM PDT by familyop

TUESDAY, Aug. 29 (HealthDay News) -- Adult obesity rates increased in 31 states during the past year, leaving an estimated two-thirds of Americans vulnerable to fatal diseases such as diabetes, stroke and cancer.

This, despite federal and state government efforts to curb the overweight epidemic, according to a new report from the Trust for America's Health.

The report, titled F as in Fat: How Obesity Policies Are Failing America, 2006, was released Tuesday and is the third in a series of annual reports by the trust detailing state obesity rates as well as the effectiveness of government policies to fight the problem.

According to official figures, the adult obesity rate rose from 15 percent in 1980 to 32 percent in 2004. Combine that with the number of Americans who are overweight but not obese, and the figure stands at 64 percent. And the childhood obesity rate more than tripled between 1980 and 2004, from 5 percent to 17 percent.

"The most important news in this report is that the obesity epidemic in America is getting worse," Jeff Levi, executive director of Trust for America's Health, said at a Tuesday morning press conference. "The percentage of obese adults exceeds 25 percent in 13 states. That should sound some serious alarm bells."

At the root of the epidemic is a combination of poor nutrition and lack of physical activity, the report stated. Being either overweight or obese increases the risk for a variety of serious health problems, including type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke and some cancers.

"What's particularly distressing is that we think we understand why this is happening. It's happening because the environment is built to promote obesity, and it is so pervasive that in order to make changes, we really need to change everything," said Cathy Nonas, director of the obesity and diabetes programs at North General Hospital in New York City and a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association.

The new report has Mississippi weighing in as the "largest" state, with 29.5 percent of its adult population considered obese. Alabama and West Virginia are second and third with 28.7 percent and 28.6 percent of the adult population, respectively, in the super-size category. Mississippi also has the highest combined level of obese plus overweight adults -- 67.3 percent.

Overall, the South is the "Biggest Belt," containing nine of the 10 states with the highest obesity rates. The region is also home to nine of the 10 states with the highest rates of diabetes and hypertension, both of which are associated with obesity.

Colorado is the "thinnest" state, with an adult obesity rate of only 16.9 percent. Other "thin" states are in the West and Northeast, including Hawaii (18.2 percent), Massachusetts (18.6 percent), Rhode Island (19.5 percent) and Montana (19.9 percent).

Obesity rates remained stable in 18 states plus the District of Columbia.

Every single state in the union failed to make enough progress to meet the national goal of reducing adult obesity levels to 15 percent or less by the year 2010, according to the report.

"The 2004 and 2005 documents reported that there was no strategic policy to address obesity," Levi said. "The 2006 report shows little improvement. While there are innovative promising pilot programs under way in some parts of the country, for the most part, federal and state policies are limited in scope, designed for the short term and woefully underfunded."

"It's a shared responsibility involving individual and society," he added.

"We believe that all stakeholders must be involved if changes are to take place," said Dr. Jeffrey P. Koplan, vice president for academic affairs at Emory University's Woodruff Health Science Center, and chairman of the Institute of Medicine Committee on Progress in Preventing Childhood Obesity.

Among the report's other findings:

Efforts to combat the obesity epidemic have failed to meet their goals, Nonas said. "I don't think they're going far enough," she said. "The perfect example of this is the physical-education and health-education requirements, where states have very little ability to enforce it. It's good that people are doing this, but it's not enough."

The report also offered a 20-step action plan to address the obesity crisis. Recommendations include improved nutritional labeling on foods; community-driven efforts to increase access to healthy foods in low-income areas; improved nutritional content on foods and beverages served and sold in schools; an improved physical environment with more and better sidewalks, parks and bike paths; better physical fitness curricula in schools; and employer-sponsored programs to increase physical activity and provide better insurance coverage for preventive services.

A recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that being obese in midlife dramatically increases your risk of dying early. People who are overweight when they are 50 have a 20 percent to 40 percent increased risk of dying prematurely. For obese people, the risk of premature death is two to three times that of normal-weight people. The primary causes of death in the group studied were heart disease and cancer.

More information

To read the full report, visit Trust for America's Health.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: 31; adult; antiamericanism; brokensuspension; clintonlegacy; flattires; foodnazis; foryourowngood; fourwheelers; health; healthczar; imdoingmypart; increases; insurance; junkscience; obesity; pseudoscience; rates; revisionisthistory; rtvs; states; topten; vegans
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1 posted on 08/29/2006 10:59:25 PM PDT by familyop
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To: familyop

I'll eat to that!


2 posted on 08/29/2006 11:06:54 PM PDT by ChiMark
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To: familyop; Gabz
Didn't read the crap.

I've been a little busy reading this..... SUV Driver Runs Over 15 People

And this..... Carter Agrees to Hold Talks With Khatami

No other comment.

3 posted on 08/29/2006 11:11:02 PM PDT by Just A Nobody (NEVER AGAIN..Support our Troops! www.irey.com and www.vets4Irey.com - Now more than Ever!)
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To: familyop

At some point I would like to see a study on the use of growth hormones in our food products and the results on the human body.

I dunno, but since the incorporation of GH into our food chain, I think our population has gotten more obese. Of course, it's also our bad food habits, and physical inactivity that contributes to that.

It just seems that females these days develop sooner as well as males. Call be a loon, but I think their is a correlation.


4 posted on 08/29/2006 11:12:43 PM PDT by Marius3188 ( I have not told half of what I saw - Marco Polo)
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To: Marius3188

You know, ever since the Simpsons came on TV people have been gaining weight in the USA.

Please, correlation does not prove causation.

Food is cheap in the USA -- it's expensive in Europe dueto heavy VAT taxes. Order a dinner in Scandinavia and you'll still be hungry afterwards, order one in the USA for half the cost and you'll have leftovers for lunch.

There are many reasons for obesity in the USA. In the 1960s when a kid wanted chips he had to share the bag with his three brothers and sisters. Nowadays he's likely to have no brothers and sisters, or just have one. Do the math -- no wonder kids from larger religious families tend to be thinner (take a trip to Utah and you'll see that).

Also, less people are exercising than in the 1970s. On top of that we are an aging society and old people are generally more prone to wieght prblems. And on the issue of class people tend to eat more when they are poor because they are getting massive amounts of food stamps, don't belong to exercise centers, have lower views of themselves and may live in areas you don't want to go jogging in.


5 posted on 08/29/2006 11:19:02 PM PDT by Bushwacker777
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To: Marius3188

good speculation on the hormones

cortical steriods are known to lead to weight gain in fat.


6 posted on 08/29/2006 11:28:33 PM PDT by staytrue
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To: Bushwacker777

I'm with you. We eat too much and exercise too little. We don't even have to get up to change the channels. A fast food soft drink once was 8 oz, and you paid for refills. Mothers prepared fresh food for the family. Now everyone gets take out or goes out to eat every meal.


7 posted on 08/29/2006 11:39:49 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Peace begins in the womb.)
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To: Marius3188

Growth hormone is just a protein. It's degraded in your stomach. No harm at all.

Estrogen is another story, though. It could potentially have that effect.

I personally blame it on a sedentary lifestyle and diet, though. Invariably, those who are fat aren't lifting or jogging or rowing. Those who do such aren't.


8 posted on 08/29/2006 11:46:39 PM PDT by CheyennePress
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To: familyop

There used to be an organization called "Size Acceptance Movement". I wonder what happened to them.


9 posted on 08/29/2006 11:56:46 PM PDT by paudio (Universal Human Rights and Multiculturalism: Liberals want to have cake and eat it too!)
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To: familyop
The report, titled F as in Fat: How Obesity Policies Are Failing America, 2006, was released Tuesday and is the third in a series of annual reports by the trust detailing state obesity rates as well as the effectiveness of government policies to fight the problem.

Just more excuses for the government to run our lives.

10 posted on 08/30/2006 12:04:07 AM PDT by etlib (No creature without tentacles has ever developed true intelligence)
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To: familyop
Rush was talking about this report this morning. It seems the majority of obesity is amongst the poorer people with he wealthy have the least.

Logical conclusion? Government food programs are making poor people fat! We feed them too much.

Argue with Rush, he said it. Obesity & Liberalism

11 posted on 08/30/2006 12:04:45 AM PDT by DakotaRed (The legacy of the left, "Screw you, I got mine.")
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To: familyop

Instead of smoking themselves to death, people are eating themselves to death. I put on 20+ lbs after I quite smoking. Loosing it required quite a bit of effort.


12 posted on 08/30/2006 12:06:01 AM PDT by EVO X
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To: familyop

It's a big problem, that's for sure, but for the most part self correcting. Until recently I wieghed 230 lbs. I'm 6 ft and 54 years old. Over the past year I lost 70 lbs primarily by cutting out soda and bread from my diet entirely. The funny thing is I am also a paraplegic so except for the exercise from pushing a chair around (which ain't much) it was all from controlling intake.


13 posted on 08/30/2006 12:07:54 AM PDT by Bogtrotter52 (Reading DU daily so you won't hafta)
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To: Bushwacker777
"On top of that we are an aging society and old people are generally more prone to wieght prblems. And on the issue of class people tend to eat more when they are poor because they are getting massive amounts of food stamps, don't belong to exercise centers, have lower views of themselves and may live in areas you don't want to go jogging in."

IMO, vanity (including self-consciousness about appearances) and laziness might be the worst enemies of our health. There are many things that one can do without conventional exercise equipment. Gardens can be grown in any climate, given enough earth in which to do so (try over 9,000 feet elev. and ~ 12 inches of yearly precipitation with occasional summer snows). Healthy, basic food ingredients can be purchased once per month for less cost in large packages. We can avoid refined sugar and consume less dairy/meat fat.

As for rough neighborhoods...yes. Residential and business urbanization is an unnecessary and man-made problem resulting from selfishness on the part of many.

Most of the people in my area are not poor at all, but they don't travel in their own yards without motorized transportation.
14 posted on 08/30/2006 12:17:12 AM PDT by familyop (Take good care of yourself, FRiends. Outlive and out-vote the Democrats.)
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To: familyop

IF you believe that men and women should weigh exactly the same.

IF you believe that fat and muscle are of "equal worth" in body composition.


15 posted on 08/30/2006 12:18:57 AM PDT by weegee (Remember "Remember the Maine"? Well in the current war "Remember the Baby Milk Factory")
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To: paudio

The PC Nazis lined them up against the wall when no one was looking.


16 posted on 08/30/2006 12:22:04 AM PDT by weegee (Remember "Remember the Maine"? Well in the current war "Remember the Baby Milk Factory")
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To: Bogtrotter52

...way to go and good work! It helps to lift with the arms (in sets) and to have some kind of overhead bar to pull on in sets, but one needs to progress slowly enough to avoid tendonitis in shoulders. Abdominal flexes in sets (if doable) also helps to avoid back problems.


17 posted on 08/30/2006 1:07:51 AM PDT by familyop (Take good care of yourself, FRiends. Outlive and out-vote the Democrats.)
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To: Marius3188
At some point I would like to see a study on the use of growth hormones in our food products and the results on the human body.

I dunno, but since the incorporation of GH into our food chain, I think our population has gotten more obese. Of course, it's also our bad food habits, and physical inactivity that contributes to that.

It just seems that females these days develop sooner as well as males. Call be a loon, but I think their is a correlation.


It's the SOY baby, it's in everything. Soy lecithin makes for huge busty kids - no matter what the sex.
18 posted on 08/30/2006 1:45:39 AM PDT by Jaysun (I have the body of an eighteen year old. I keep it in the fridge.)
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To: Jaysun

And yes, interestingly, soy does raise estrogen levels, as well. Though I doubt that's what is causing this... ;)


19 posted on 08/30/2006 1:58:55 AM PDT by CheyennePress
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To: CheyennePress
And yes, interestingly, soy does raise estrogen levels, as well. Though I doubt that's what is causing this... ;)

There might be something to it. Truth be known the increase in obesity and diabetes fits nicely with the "low fat" diet craze. It's idiotic, really. We think that fat flows through our veins and clogs our hearts. Nothing else works that way. We don't have bits of carrot and lettuce clogging up our tickers. And those that are 90 or older today (and there are a lot of them) ate fruit so rarely that it was considered a thoughtful Christmas gift.

I'm sticking with what works. Those in my family live to be a ripe old age, and my great grandfather always says, "Don't forget your lard boy, gotta get your lard." He says it tongue in cheek, but he's 103 so he says everything tongue in cheek.

We'll see the folly in the idea that fat = evil sooner or later. Hopefully before Alzheimer's, heart disease, and diabetes becomes the norm.
20 posted on 08/30/2006 2:12:00 AM PDT by Jaysun (I have the body of an eighteen year old. I keep it in the fridge.)
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