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Bigger But Not Better

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IN THIS CHAPTER

Defining obesity

Listing the fattest and fittest states

Figuring out how much you should weigh

Understanding how you fit into the equation

According to the Federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in 2016, nearly seven of every ten American adults was either overweight or obese, two terms this chapter defines. And movie titles aside, the kids are not all right. Overall, the 2013 National Survey of Children’s Health reported that more than one in every five American children age 12 to 19 weigh too much. This excess poundage isn’t pretty, and it comes at a cost to our health. One 2019 study that followed more than 1,000,000 American women showed a link between obesity in middle age and dementia later in life. Another suggested that childhood obesity may affect the accuracy of routine blood tests. There’s also a cost in dollars and cents. The CDC puts the price of treating obesity-related illnesses at nearly $200 billion each year, an amount equal to about 6 percent of all medical spending in the United States.

If these trends continue, researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine predict that by the year 2030, nearly 90 percent of American adults will be overweight, at which point the cost of treating their obesity-related health problems will approach $1 trillion a year. No wonder the American Heart Association says we’re in the grip of an obesity epidemic. And that is only one of the topics I cover in this chapter. Add on how much your own body should weigh, the methods by which to judge your obesity or lack thereof (and how to evaluate the accuracy of the numbers), plus the conditions that make obesity more hazardous to your health, and you have a lot to put on your plate about weight.

Nutrition For Dummies

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