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If Trends Continue,
We'll Be All Fat in 40 Years
NEW YORK - If the trends of the past three decades
continue, it’s possible that every American adult could be
overweight 40 years from now, a government-funded study projects.
The figure might sound alarming, or impossible,
but researchers say that even if the actual rate never reaches the
100-percent mark, any upward movement is worrying; two-thirds of
the population is already overweight.
“Genetically and physiologically, it should
be impossible” for all U.S. adults to become overweight, said
Dr. Lan Liang of the federal government’s Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, one of the researchers on the study.
However, she told Reuters Health, the data suggest
that if the trends of the past 30 years persist, “that is
the direction we’re going.”
Already, she and her colleagues point out, some
groups of U.S. adults have extremely high rates of overweight and
obesity; among African- American women, for instance, 78 percent
are currently overweight or obese.
A ‘wake-up
call’?
The new projections, published in the journal
Obesity, are based on government survey data collected between the
1970s and 2004.
If the trends of those years continue, the researchers
estimate that 86 percent of American adults will be overweight by
2030, with an obesity rate of 51 percent. By 2048, all U.S. adults
could be at least mildly overweight.
Weight problems will be most acute among African-Americans
and Mexican- Americans, the study projects. All black women could
be overweight by 2034, according to the researchers, as could more
than 90 percent of Mexican-American men.
All of this rests on the “big assumption”
that the trends of recent decades will march on unabated, Liang
acknowledged.
“This is really intended as a wake-up call
to show what could happen if nothing changes,” she said.
Waistlines aren’t the only thing poised to
balloon in the future, according to Liang and her colleagues. They
estimate that the healthcare costs directly related to excess pounds
will double each decade, reaching $957 billion in 2030 — accounting
for one of every six healthcare dollars spent in the U.S.
Those financial projections are based on Census
data and published estimates of the current healthcare costs attributed
to excess weight — and they are probably a “huge underestimate”
of what the actual costs will be, Liang said.
The findings highlight a need for widespread efforts
to improve Americans’ lifestyles and keep their weight in
check, according to the researchers. Simply telling people to eat
less and exercise more is not enough, Liang noted.
Broader social changes are needed as well, she
said -- such as making communities more pedestrian-friendly so that
people can walk regularly, or getting the food industry to offer
healthier, calorie-conscious choices.
“It really needs to be more than an individual
effort,” Liang said. “It needs to be a societal effort.”
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com.
Date created: Aug 2008
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