Dictionary Definition
fatness n : excess bodily weight; "she found
fatness disgusting in herself as well as in others" [syn: fat, blubber, avoirdupois] [ant: leanness]
User Contributed Dictionary
See also
Extensive Definition
Obesity is a condition in which the natural
energy reserve, stored in the fatty
tissue of humans and
other mammals, exceeds
healthy limits. It is commonly defined as a body mass
index (weight divided by height squared) of 30 kg/m2 or
higher.
Although obesity is an individual clinical
condition, some authorities view it as a serious and growing
public
health problem. Some studies show that excessive body weight
has been shown to predispose to various diseases, particularly cardiovascular
diseases, diabetes
mellitus type 2, sleep apnea
and osteoarthritis.
Classification
Obesity can be defined in absolute or relative terms. In practical settings, obesity is typically evaluated in absolute terms by measuring BMI (body mass index), but also in terms of its distribution through waist circumference or waist-hip circumference ratio measurements. In addition, the presence of obesity needs to be regarded in the context of other risk factors and comorbidities (other medical conditions that could influence risk of complications). BMI was developed by the Belgian statistician and anthropometrist Adolphe Quetelet. It is calculated by dividing the subject's weight by the square of his/her height, typically expressed either in metric or US "Customary" units:- Metric: BMI = kg/m^2
- US/Customary: BMI=lb*703/in^2
The most commonly used definitions, established
by the WHO
in 1997 and published in 2000, provide the following values:
- A BMI less than 18.5 is underweight
- A BMI of 18.5–24.9 is normal weight
- A BMI of 25.0–29.9 is overweight
- A BMI of 30.0–39.9 is obese
- A BMI of 40.0 or higher is severely (or morbidly) obese
- A BMI of 35.0 or higher in the presence of at least one other significant comorbidity is also classified by some bodies as morbid obesity.
In a clinical setting, physicians take into
account race, ethnicity, lean mass (muscularity), age, sex, and
other factors which can affect the interpretation of BMI. BMI
overestimates body fat in persons who are very muscular, and it can
underestimate body fat in persons who have lost body mass (e.g.
many elderly).
Waist circumference
BMI does not take into account differing ratios
of adipose to lean
tissue; nor does it distinguish between differing forms of
adiposity, some of which may correlate more closely with cardiovascular risk.
Increasing understanding of the biology of different forms of
adipose tissue has shown that visceral fat or central
obesity (male-type or apple-type obesity, also known as "belly
fat") has a much stronger correlation, particularly with cardiovascular
disease, than the BMI alone.
The absolute waist circumference (>102 cm in
men and >88 cm in women) or waist-hip
ratio (>0.9 for men and >0.85 for women)
Body fat measurement
An alternative way to determine obesity is to assess percent body fat. Doctors and scientists generally agree that men with more than 25% body fat and women with more than 30% body fat are obese. However, it is difficult to measure body fat precisely. The most accepted method has been to weigh a person underwater, but underwater weighing is a procedure limited to laboratories with special equipment. Two simpler methods for measuring body fat are the skinfold test, in which a pinch of skin is precisely measured to determine the thickness of the subcutaneous fat layer; or bioelectrical impedance analysis, usually only carried out at specialist clinics. Their routine use is discouraged.Other measurements of body fat include computed
tomography (CT/CAT scan), magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI/NMR), and
dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA).
Risk factors and comorbidities
The presence of risk factors and diseases associated with obesity are also used to establish a clinical diagnosis. Coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and sleep apnea are possible life-threatening risk factors that would indicate clinical treatment of obesity. Mortality is increased in obesity, with a BMI of over 32 being associated with a doubled risk of death. There are alterations in the body's response to insulin (insulin resistance), a proinflammatory state and an increased tendency to thrombosis (prothrombotic state).Apart from the metabolic syndrome, obesity is
also correlated with
a variety of other complications. For some of these complaints, it
has not been clearly established to what extent they are caused
directly by obesity itself, or have some other cause (such as
limited exercise) that causes obesity as well.
- Cardiovascular: congestive heart failure, enlarged heart and its associated arrhythmias and dizziness, varicose veins, and pulmonary embolism
- Endocrine: polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), menstrual disorders, and infertility
- Gastrointestinal: gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), fatty liver disease, cholelithiasis (gallstones), hernia, and colorectal cancer
- Renal and genitourinary: erectile dysfunction, urinary incontinence, chronic renal failure, hypogonadism (male), breast cancer (female), uterine cancer (female), stillbirth
- Integument (skin and appendages): stretch marks, acanthosis nigricans, lymphedema, cellulitis, carbuncles, intertrigo
- Musculoskeletal: hyperuricemia (which predisposes to gout), immobility, osteoarthritis, low back pain
- Neurologic: stroke, meralgia paresthetica, headache, carpal tunnel syndrome, dementia, idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- Respiratory: obstructive sleep apnea, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, asthma
- Psychological: Depression, low self esteem, body dysmorphic disorder, social stigmatization
While being severely obese has many health
ramifications, those who are somewhat overweight face little
increased mortality or morbidity. Osteoporosis
is known to occur less in slightly overweight people.
Causes and mechanisms
Lifestyle
Most researchers have concluded that the combination of an excessive nutrient intake and a sedentary lifestyle are the main cause for the rapid acceleration of obesity in Western society in the last quarter of the 20th century. Obesity caused specifically by overeating is called exogenous obesity.Despite the widespread availability of
nutritional information in schools, doctors' offices, on the
internet and on product packaging, it is evident that overeating
remains a substantial problem. For instance, reliance on energy-dense
fast-food meals tripled between 1977 and 1995, and calorie intake
quadrupled over the same period.
However, dietary intake in itself is insufficient
to explain the phenomenal rise in levels of obesity in much of the
industrialized world during recent years. An increasingly sedentary
lifestyle also has a significant role to play. More and more
research into child
obesity, for example, links such things as the school
run, with the current high levels of this disease.
Less well established and possibly
underinvestigated life style issues that may influence obesity
include (1) insufficient sleep, (2) endocrine
disruptors - food substances that interfere with lipid
metabolism, (3) decreased variability in ambient temperature, (4)
decreased rates of smoking,
which suppresses appetite, (5) increased use of medication that
leads to weight gain, (6) increased distribution of ethnic and age
groups that tend to be heavier, (7) pregnancy at a later age, (8)
intrauterine and intergenerational effects, (9) positive natural
selection of people with a higher BMI, (10) assortative
mating, heavier people tending to form relationships with each
other.
Genetics
As with many medical conditions, the calorific imbalance that results in obesity is probably the result of a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Polymorphisms in various genes controlling appetite, metabolism, and adipokine release predispose to obesity, but the condition requires availability of sufficient calories, and possibly other factors, to develop fully. Various genetic conditions that feature obesity have been identified (such as Prader-Willi syndrome, Bardet-Biedl syndrome, MOMO syndrome, leptin receptor mutations and melanocortin receptor mutations), but known single-locus mutations have been found in only about 7% of obese individuals; these people tend to be very obese from a very young age. It is thought that a large proportion of the causative genes are still to be identified. Studies in over 5000 identical twins demonstrated that childhood obesity has a strong (77%) inherited component.A 2007 study identified fairly common mutations
in the FTO
gene; heterozygotes had a 30% increased risk of obesity, while
homozygotes faced a 70% increased risk.
On a population level, the thrifty
gene hypothesis postulates that certain ethnic groups may be
more prone to obesity than others, and the ability to take
advantage of rare periods of abundance and use such abundance by
storing energy efficiently may have been an evolutionary advantage
in times when food was scarce. Individuals with greater adipose
reserves were more likely to survive famine. This tendency to store
fat is likely maladaptive in a society with stable food
supplies.
Medical illness
Certain physical and mental illnesses and particular pharmaceutical substances may predispose to obesity. Apart from the fact that correcting these situations may improve the obesity, the presence of increased body weight may complicate the management of others.Medical illnesses that increase obesity risk
include several rare congenital syndromes (listed above), hypothyroidism, Cushing's
syndrome, growth
hormone deficiency. Smoking
cessation is a known cause for moderate weight gain, as
nicotine suppresses appetite. Certain medications (e.g. steroids, atypical
antipsychotics, some fertility
medication) may cause weight gain.
Mental illnesses may also increase obesity risk,
specifically some eating
disorders such as bulimia
nervosa, binge
eating disorder, and compulsive
overeating (also known as food addiction).
Neurobiological mechanisms
Flier summarizes the many possible pathophysiological
mechanisms involved in the development and maintenance of obesity.
This field of research had been almost unapproached until leptin was discovered in 1994.
Since this discovery, many other hormonal mechanisms have been
elucidated that participate in the regulation of appetite and food intake,
storage patterns of adipose
tissue, and development of insulin
resistance. Since leptin's discovery, ghrelin, orexin, PYY 3-36,
cholecystokinin,
adiponectin, and
many other mediators have been studied. The adipokines are mediators
produced by adipose tissue; their action is thought to modify many
obesity-related diseases.
Leptin and ghrelin are considered to be
complementary in their influence on appetite, with ghrelin produced
by the stomach
modulating short-term appetitive control (i.e. to eat when the
stomach is empty and to stop when the stomach is stretched). Leptin
is produced by adipose tissue to signal fat storage reserves in the
body, and mediates long-term appetitive controls (i.e. to eat more
when fat storages are low and less when fat storages are high).
Although administration of leptin may be effective in a small
subset of obese individuals who are leptin deficient, many more
obese individuals are thought to be leptin resistant. This
resistance is thought to explain in part why administration of
leptin has not been shown to be effective in suppressing appetite
in most obese subjects.
While leptin and ghrelin are produced
peripherally, they control appetite through their actions on the
central
nervous system. In particular, they and other appetite-related
hormones act on the hypothalamus, a region of
the brain central to the regulation of food intake and energy
expenditure. There are several circuits within the hypothalamus
that contribute to its role in integrating appetite, the melanocortin pathway being
the most well understood.
The arcuate nucleus contains two distinct groups
of neurons.
Social determinants
Some obesity co-factors are resistant to the theory that the "epidemic" is a new phenomenon. In particular, a class co-factor consistently appears across many studies. Comparing net worth with BMI scores, a 2004 study found obese American subjects approximately half as wealthy as thin ones. When income differentials were factored out, the inequity persisted—thin subjects were inheriting more wealth than fat ones. A higher rate of a lower level of education and tendencies to rely on cheaper fast foods is seen as a reason why these results are so dissimilar. Another study finds women who married into higher status are predictably thinner than women who married into lower status.A 2007 study of more than 32,500 children of the
original Framingham
Heart Study cohort followed for 32 years indicated that BMI
change in friends, siblings or spouse predicted BMI change in
subjects irrespective of geographical distance. The association was
strongest among mutual friends and lower among siblings and spouses
(although these differences were not statistically significant).
The authors concluded from the results that acceptance of body mass
plays an important role in changes in body size.
Treatment
The main treatment for obesity is to reduce body
fat by eating fewer
calories and exercising
more. Diet and exercise programs produce an average weight loss of
approximately 8% of total body mass (excluding program drop-outs).
Not all dieters are satisfied with these results, but a loss of as
little as 5% of body mass can create large health benefits.
Much more difficult than reducing body fat is
keeping it off. Eighty to ninety-five percent of those who lose 10%
or more of their body mass by
dieting regain all that weight back within two to five years. The
body has systems that maintain its homeostasis at certain set
points, including body weight. Therefore, keeping weight off
generally requires making exercise
and eating right
a permanent part of a person's lifestyle.
Clinical protocols
In a clinical practice guideline by the American College of Physicians, the following five recommendations are made:- People with a BMI of over 30 should be counseled on diet, exercise and other relevant behavioral interventions, and set a realistic goal for weight loss.
- If these goals are not achieved, pharmacotherapy can be offered. The patient needs to be informed of the possibility of side-effects and the unavailability of long-term safety and efficacy data.
- Drug therapy may consist of sibutramine, orlistat, phentermine, diethylpropion, fluoxetine, and bupropion. For more severe cases of obesity, stronger drugs such as amphetamine and methamphetamine may be used on a selective basis. Evidence is not sufficient to recommend sertraline, topiramate, or zonisamide.
- In patients with BMI > 40 who fail to achieve their weight loss goals (with or without medication) and who develop obesity-related complications, referral for bariatric surgery may be indicated. The patient needs to be aware of the potential complications.
- Those requiring bariatric surgery should be referred to high-volume referral centers, as the evidence suggests that surgeons who frequently perform these procedures have fewer complications.
A
clinical practice guideline by the
US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) concluded that the
evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against routine
behavioral counseling to promote a healthy diet in unselected
patients in primary care settings, but that intensive behavioral
dietary counseling is recommended in those with hyperlipidemia and other
known risk factors for cardiovascular and diet-related chronic
disease. Intensive counseling can be delivered by primary care
clinicians or by referral to other specialists, such as
nutritionists or dietitians.
Exercise
Exercise requires energy (calories). Calories are stored in body fat. The body breaks down its fat stores in order to provide energy during prolonged aerobic exercise. The largest muscles in the body are the leg muscles, and naturally these burn the most calories, which make walking, running, and cycling among the most effective forms of exercise for reducing body fat.A meta-analysis
of
randomized controlled trials by the international Cochrane
Collaboration found that "exercise combined with diet resulted
in a greater weight reduction than diet alone".
Dieting
In general, dieting means eating less. Various
dietary approaches have been proposed, some of which have been
compared by
randomized controlled trials:
- A comparison of Dr. Atkins', Slim-Fast's, Weight Watchers', and Rosemary Conley's diets found no significant differences.
- A comparison of Atkins diet, Zone diet, Weight Watchers, and Ornish diet noted that all diets caused modest but statistically significant levels of weight loss after 1 year, with all diets producing equal results. The Atkins and Ornish diets had higher rates of discontinuation, possibly because many individuals found these diets too restrictive.
Low carbohydrate versus low fat
Many studies have focused on diets that reduce calories via a low-carbohydrate (Atkins diet, Zone diet) diet versus a low-fat diet (LEARN diet, Ornish diet). The Nurses' Health Study, an observational cohort study, found that low carbohydrate diets based on vegetable sources of fat and protein are associated with less coronary heart disease.A meta-analysis
of
randomized controlled trials by the international Cochrane
Collaboration in 2002 concluded that fat-restricted diets are
no better than calorie restricted diets in achieving long term
weight loss in overweight or obese people.
A more recent meta-analysis
that included
randomized controlled trials published after the Cochrane
review
The Women's
Health Initiative Randomized Controlled Dietary Modification
Trial found that a diet of total fat to 20% of energy and
increasing consumption of vegetables and fruit to at least 5
servings daily and grains to at least 6 servings daily resulted in:
- no reduction in cardiovascular disease
- an insignificant reduction in invasive breast cancer
- no reductions in colorectal cancer
Additional recent
randomized controlled trials have found that:
- A comparison of Atkins, Zone diet, Ornish diet, and LEARN diet in premenopausal women found the greatest benefit from the Atkins diet.
- The choice of diet for a specific person may be influenced by measuring the invididual's insulin secretion:
- In young adults "Reducing glycemic [carbohydrate] load may be especially important to achieve weight loss among individuals with high insulin secretion." This is consistent with prior studies of diabetic patients in which low carbohydrate diets were more beneficial.
The
American Diabetes Association released for the first time a
recommendation (in its January 2008 Clinical Practice
Recommendations) for a low carbohydrate diet to reduce weight for
those with or at risk of Type 2 diabetes.
Low glycemic index
"The glycemic index factor is a ranking of foods based on their overall effect on blood sugar levels. Low glycaemic index foods, such as lentils, provide a slower more consistent source of glucose to the bloodstream, thereby stimulating less insulin release than high glycaemic index foods, such as white bread."The glycemic load is "the mathematical product of
the glycemic index and the carbohydrate amount".
In a
randomized controlled trial that compared four diets that
varied in carbohydrate amount and glycemic index found complicated
results:
- Diet 1 and 2 were high carbohydrate (55% of total energy
intake)
- Diet 1 was high-glycemic index
- Diet 2 was low-glycemic index
- Diet 3 and 4 were high protein (25% of total energy intake)
- Diet 3 was high-glycemic index
- Diet 4 was low-glycemic index
Diets 2 and 3 lost the most weight and fat mass;
however, low density lipoprotein fell in Diet 2 and rose in Diet 3.
Thus the authors concluded that the high-carbohydrate, low-glycemic
index diet was the most favorable.
A meta-analysis
by the Cochrane
Collaboration concluded that low glycemic index or low glycemic
load diets led to more weight loss and better lipid profiles.
However, the Cochrane
Collaboration grouped low glycemic index and low glycemic load
diets together and did not try to separate the effects of the load
versus the index.
Drugs
Medication most commonly prescribed for diet/exercise-resistant obesity is orlistat (Xenical, which reduces intestinal fat absorption by inhibiting pancreatic lipase) and sibutramine (Reductil, Meridia, an anorectic). Weight loss with these drugs is modest, and over the longer term average weight loss on orlistat is 2.9 kg, sibutramine 4.2 kg and rimonabant 4.7 kg. Orlistat and rimonabant lead to a reduced incidence of diabetes, and all drugs have some effect on lipoproteins (different forms of cholesterol). There is little data, however, on longer-term complications of obesity such as heart attacks. All drugs have side-effects and potential contraindications. It is common for weight loss drugs to be tried for a period of time (e.g. 3 months), and to discontinue them or change to another agent if no benefit is achieved, such as weight loss less than 5% the total body weight.Obesity may also influence the choice of drug
treatment for diabetes. Metformin may
lead to mild weight reduction (as opposed to sulfonylureas and insulin), and has been
demonstrated to reduce the risk of cardiovascular
disease in type 2 diabetics who are obese. The thiazolidinediones
may cause slight weight gain, but decrease the "pathologic" form of
abdominal fat and may therefore be used in diabetics with central
obesity.
Bariatric surgery
Bariatric surgery (or "weight loss surgery") is the use of surgical interventions in the treatment of obesity. As every surgical intervention may lead to complications, it is regarded as a last resort when dietary modification and pharmacological treatment have proven to be unsuccessful. Weight loss surgery relies on various principles; the most common approaches are reducing the volume of the stomach, producing an earlier sense of satiation (e.g. by adjustable gastric banding and vertical banded gastroplasty) while others also reduce the length of bowel that food will be in contact with, directly reducing absorption (gastric bypass surgery). Band surgery is reversible, while bowel shortening operations are not. Some procedures can be performed laparoscopically. Complications from weight loss surgery are frequent.Two large studies have demonstrated a mortality
benefit from bariatric surgery. A marked decrease in the risk of
diabetes
mellitus, cardiovascular
disease and cancer
has been found. Weight loss was most marked in the first few months
after surgery, but the benefit was sustained in the longer term. In
one study there was an unexplained increase in deaths from
accidents and suicide that did not outweigh the benefit in terms of
disease prevention. Gastric bypass surgery was about twice as
effective as banding procedures.
Cultural and social significance
Etymology
Obesity is the nominal form of obese which comes from the Latin obēsus, which means "stout, fat, or plump." Ēsus is the past participle of edere (to eat), with ob added to it. In Classical Latin, this verb is seen only in past participial form. Its first attested usage in English was in 1651, in Noah Biggs's Matæotechnia Medicinæ Praxeos.History
In several human cultures, obesity was associated with physical attractiveness, strength, and fertility. Some of the earliest known cultural artifacts, known as Venus figurines, are pocket-sized statuettes representing an obese female figure. Although their cultural significance is unrecorded, their widespread use throughout pre-historic Mediterranean and European cultures suggests a central role for the obese female form in magical rituals, and suggests cultural approval of (and perhaps reverence for) this body form. This is most likely due to their perceived ability to easily bear children and survive famine.Obesity was considered a symbol of wealth and social
status in cultures prone to food shortages or famine. It was
viewed in the same manner well into the early modern period in
European cultures as well, but as food
security was realized, it came to serve more as a visible
signifier of "lust for life", appetite, and immersion in the realm
of the erotic.
This was especially the case in the visual arts,
such as the paintings of Rubens
(1577–1640), whose regular depiction of fat women gives
us the description Rubenesque. Obesity can also be seen as a symbol
within a system of prestige. "The kind of food, the quantity, and
the manner in which it is served are among the important criteria
of social class. In most tribal societies, even those with a highly
stratified social system, everyone – royalty and the commoners –
ate the same kind of food, and if there was famine everyone was
hungry. With the ever increasing diversity of foods, food has
become not only a matter of social status, but also a mark of one's
personality and taste."
Contemporary culture
In modern Western culture, the obese body shape is widely regarded as unattractive and many negative stereotypes are commonly associated with obese people. Obese children, teenagers and adults can also face a heavy social stigma. Obese children are frequently the targets of bullies and are often shunned by their peers. Although obesity rates are rising amongst all social classes in the West, obesity is often seen as a sign of lower socio-economic status. Most obese people have experienced negative thoughts about their body image, and some take drastic steps to try to change their shape including dieting, the use of diet pills, and even surgery. Not all contemporary cultures disapprove of obesity. There are many cultures which are traditionally more approving (to varying degrees) of obesity, including some African, Arabic, Indian, and Pacific Island cultures. Especially in recent decades, obesity has come to be seen more as a medical condition in modern Western culture even being referred to as an epidemic.Recently emerging is a small but vocal fat
acceptance movement that seeks to challenge weight-based
discrimination.
Obesity acceptance and advocacy groups have initiated litigation to
defend the rights of obese people and to prevent their social
exclusion. Some notable figures within this movement, such as
Paul
Campos, argue that the social stigma surrounding obesity is
founded in cultural anxiety, and that public concern
over health risks associated with obesity are inappropriately used
as a rationalization for this
stigma.
Government agencies and private medicine have
warned Americans for years of the adverse health effects associated
with overweight and obesity. Despite the warnings, the problem is
getting worse. In 2004, the CDC reported that 66.3% of adults in
the United States were overweight or obese. The cause in most cases
is a sedentary lifestyle; approximately 40% of adults in the United
States do not participate in any leisure-time physical activity and
less than 1/3 of adults engage in the recommended amount of
physical activity. Overweight and obesity are easily determined by
using Body Mass Index (BMI); this index uses your weight and height
to determine body fat. An index A BMI range of 25 to 29.9 is
considered overweight and anything over 30 obese. Individuals with
a BMI over 30 increase the risk of several heath hazards.
Popular culture
Various stereotypes of obese people have found their way into expressions of popular culture. A common stereotype is the obese character who has a warm and dependable personality, or a jolly fat man like Santa Claus. Equally common is the obese vicious bully (such as Dudley Dursley from the Harry Potter book series, Eric Cartman from South Park, Nelson Muntz from The Simpsons).Gluttony and
obesity are commonly depicted together in works of fiction.
In cartoons, obesity is often used to comedic
effect, with fat animal characters (such as Piggy,
Porky
Pig,
Tummi Gummi, and
Podgy Pig) having to squeeze through narrow spaces, frequently
getting stuck or even exploding.
A more unusual example of obesity-related humour
is Bustopher
Jones, from T. S.
Eliot's poem "Bustopher Jones: The Cat About Town" featured in
Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, and the musical Cats
derived from the poem. Bustopher's claim to fame is that he is a
regular visitor to many gentlemen's
clubs including Drones, Blimp's and
the Tomb. Due to his constant lunching at these clubs, he is
remarkably fat, being described by others as "a twenty-five
pounder... And he's putting on weight everyday." Another popular
character, Garfield, a
cartoon cat, is also obese for humor. When his owner, Jon, puts him
on diets, rather than losing weight, Garfield slows down his weight
gain.
It can be argued that depiction in popular
culture adds to and maintains commonly perceived stereotypes, in
turn harming the self esteem
of obese people . On the other hand, obesity is often associated
with positive characteristics such as good humor. In addition, some
people are sexually
attracted to obese people (see chubby
culture and fat
admirer).
Public health and policy
Prevalence
The Health Survey for England predicts that more than 12 million adults and 1 million children will be obese by 2010 if no action is taken. The prevalence of overweight and obesity in the United States makes obesity a leading public health problem. The United States has the highest rates of obesity in the developed world. From 1980 to 2002, obesity has doubled in adults and overweight prevalence has tripled in children and adolescents. From 2003-2004, "children and adolescents aged 2 to 19 years, 17.1% were overweight...and 32.2% of adults aged 20 years or older were obese." The prevalence in the United States continues to rise. Because of the booming economy increasing average incomes, the population of China has recently begun a more sedentary lifestyle and at the same time begun consuming more calorie-rich foods. From 1991 to 2004 the percentage of adults who are overweight or obese increased from 12.9% to 27.3%.Obesity is a public health and policy problem
because of its prevalence, costs and burdens. The prevalence of
obesity has been continually rising for two decades. This sudden
rise in obesity prevalence is attributed to environmental and
population factors rather than individual behavior and biology
because of the rapid and continual rise in the number of overweight
and obese individuals. The current environment produces risk
factors for decreased physical activity and for increased calorie
consumption. These environmental factors operate on the population
to decrease physical activity and increase calorie
consumption.
Environmental factors
While it may often appear obvious why a certain individual gets fat, it is far more difficult to understand why the average weight of certain societies have recently been growing. While genetic causes are central to understanding obesity, they cannot fully explain why one culture grows fatter than another.This is most notable in the United
States. In the years from just after the Second
World War until 1960 the average person's weight increased, but
few were obese. In the two and a half decades since 1980 the growth
in the rate of obesity has accelerated markedly and is increasingly
becoming a public
health concern
- Lower relative cost of foodstuffs: massive changes in agricultural policy in the United States and Europe have led to food prices for consumers being lower than at any point in history. This can raise costs for consumers in some areas but greatly lower it in others. Current debates into trade policy highlight disagreements on the effects of subsidies. In the United States, production of corn, soy, wheat and rice is subsidized through the U.S. farm bill. Corn and soy, which are main sources of the sugars and fats in processed food, are thus cheap compared to fruits and vegetables.
- Increased marketing has also played a role. In the early 1980s in America the Reagan administration lifted most regulations pertaining to sweets and fast food advertising to children. As a result, the number of advertisements seen by the average child increased greatly, and a large proportion of these were for fast food and sweets.
- The changing workforce as each year a greater percent of the population spends their entire workday behind a desk or computer, seeing virtually no exercise. In the kitchen the microwave oven has seen sales of calorie-dense frozen convenience foods skyrocket and has encouraged more elaborate snacking.
- A social cause that is believed by many to play a role is the increasing number of two income households in which one parent no longer remains home to look after the house. This increases the number of restaurant and take-out meals.
- Urban sprawl may be a factor: obesity rates increase as urban sprawl increases, possibly due to less walking and less time for cooking.
- Since 1980 fast food restaurants have seen dramatic growth in terms of the number of outlets and customers served. Low food costs, and intense competition for market share, led to increased portion sizes—for example, McDonalds french fries portions rose from 200 calories (840 kilojoules) in 1960 to over 600 calories (2,500 kJ) today.
Public health and policy responses
Public health and policy responses to obesity
seek to understand and correct the environmental factors
responsible for shifts in the prevalence of overweight and obesity
in a population. Obesity and overweight are, currently, primarily
policy problems in the United States. Policy and public health
solutions look to change the environmental factors that promote
calorie dense, low nutrient food consumption and that inhibit
physical activity.
In the United States, policy has focused
primarily on controlling childhood
obesity which has the most serious long-term public health
implication. Efforts have been underway to target schools. There
are efforts underway to reform federally-reimbursed meal programs,
limit food marketing to children, and ban or limit access to sugar
sweetened beverages. In Europe, policy has focused on limiting
marketing to children. There has been international focus on sugar
policy and the role of agriculture policy in producing food
environments that produce overweight and obesity in a population.
To confront physical activity, efforts have examined zoning and
access parks and safe routes in cities.
In the United
Kingdom, a 2004 report by the
Royal College of Physicians, the Faculty
of Public Health and the
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, titled "Storing
up Problems", was followed by a report by the British
House of Commons Health
Select Committee - the "the most comprehensive inquiry" ever by
that body - on the impact of obesity on health and society in the
UK and possible approaches to the problem. In 2006, the
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE)
issued a guideline on the diagnosis and management of obesity, as
well as policy implications for non-healthcare organizations such
as local councils.
Non-medical consequences
Besides increases in disease and mortality there are other implications of the present world trend in obesity. Among these are:- Increased pressure on airline revenues (or increased fares) due to lobbying efforts to increase seating width on commercial airplanes, and due to higher fuel costs: in 2000, extra weight of obese passengers cost airlines and consumers US$275,000,000.
- Increased litigation by obese persons suing restaurants (for causing obesity) and airlines (over airline seating width)http://www.forbes.com/2002/10/24/cx_ld_1024obese.html http://www.cbc.ca/story/news/national/2000/12/12/Consumers/airlines_lawsuit001212.html. The Personal Responsibility in Food Consumption Act of 2005 was motivated by a need to reduce litigation from obesity activists.
- Sizable societal economic costs attributable to obesity, with medical costs attributable to obesity rising to 78.5 billion dollars or 9.1 percent of all medical expenditures in the U.S. as of 1998 One recent study, however, found that while obesity prevention programs reduce the cost of treating diseases related to obesity, those reductions are offset by medical costs during the additional years of life gained. The authors conclude that reducing obesity may improve public health, but is unlikely to reduce overall health spending.
- Decreased worker productivity as measured by usage of disability leave and absenteeism at work.
- A study examining Duke University employees found that those with a BMI>40 filed twice as many workers compensation claims as workers whose BMI was 18.5-24.9, and had more than 12 times as many lost work days. The most common injuries were due to falls and lifting, and affected the lower extremities, wrists or hands, and backs.
See also
References
External links
- World Health Organization - Obesity pages
- Diet, Nutrition and the prevention of chronic diseases (including obesity) by a Joint WHO/FAO Expert consultation (2003).
- Obesity at Endotext.org
- International Task Force on Obesity
- The Obesity Society (USA)
- National Obesity Forum (UK)
- Australasian Society for the Study of Obesity
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