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Study: Obesity As Bad For Your Health As Smoking

MARIA CHENG   03/17/09 09:05 PM ET   AP

Obese

LONDON — Being obese can take years off your life and in some cases may be as dangerous as smoking, a new study says. British researchers at the University of Oxford analyzed 57 studies mostly in Europe and North America, following nearly one million people for an average of 10 to 15 years. During that time, about 100,000 of those people died.

The studies used Body Mass Index (BMI), a measurement that divides a person's weight in kilograms by their height squared in meters to determine obesity. Researchers found that death rates were lowest in people who had a BMI of 23 to 24, on the high side of the normal range.

Health officials generally define overweight people as those with a BMI from 25 to 29, and obese people as those with a BMI above 30.

The study was published online Wednesday in the medical journal, Lancet. It was paid for by Britain's Medical Research Council, the British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK and others.

"If you are heading towards obesity, it may be a good idea to lose weight," said Sir Richard Peto, the study's main statistician and a professor at Oxford University.

Peto and colleagues found that people who were moderately fat, with a BMI from 30 to 35, lost about three years of life. People who were morbidly fat _ those with a BMI above 40 _ lost about 10 years off their expected lifespan, similar to the effect of lifelong smoking.

Moderately obese people were 50 percent more likely to die prematurely than normal-weight people, said Gary Whitlock, the Oxford University epidemiologist who led the study.

He said that obese people were also two thirds more likely to die of a heart attack or stroke, and up to four times more likely to die of diabetes, kidney or liver problems. They were one sixth more likely to die of cancer.

"This really emphasizes the importance of weight gain," said Dr. Arne Astrup, a professor of nutrition at the University of Copenhagen who was not linked to the Lancet study. "Even a small increase in your BMI is enough to increase your risks for cardiovascular disease and cancer."

Previous studies have found that death rates increase both above and below a normal BMI score, and that people who are moderately overweight live longer than underweight or normal-weight people.

Other experts said that because the papers used in the study mostly started between 1975 and 1985, their conclusions were not as relevant today.

Astrup worried that rising obesity rates may reverse the steep drops in heart disease seen in the West.

"Obesity is the new dark horse for public health officials," he said. "People need to be aware of the risks they're taking when they gain weight."

___

On the Net:

http://www.lancet.com

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LONDON — Being obese can take years off your life and in some cases may be as dangerous as smoking, a new study says. British researchers at the University of Oxford analyzed 57 studies mostly i...
LONDON — Being obese can take years off your life and in some cases may be as dangerous as smoking, a new study says. British researchers at the University of Oxford analyzed 57 studies mostly i...
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09:06 AM on 03/24/2009
Let me post one last thing before I give up trying to get people to at least recognize their hatred and elevate their ignorance to tolerance, if nothing else:

My mother battled lymphatic CANCER for most of 2008. She is 79 years old (80 in June) and always very healthy.. After horrendously harsh chemo treatments -- twice a week, every three weeks, for months-- and all the illness, pain, nausea, hair loss, dehydration, insomnia, etc that goes along with chemo treatments, do you know what actually SAVED my mother's life?

Being about 50 lbs overweight at the time she started the treatments.

She lost nearly 60 lbs over the course of 8 months due to the chemo and its side effects.
If she had been at a "normal" weight, she would not have survived without GREAT measures of intervention and constant hospitalization for those 8 months. Emotionally, that probably would have done her in anyway....
She is totally cancer free now as of Feb. 09; And she will be around for years to come.
I'm GLAD my mother was a "fat" lady.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mercymercyme
03:09 PM on 03/23/2009
I am a 59 y.o. female. Decades of yo-yo dieting have messed up my metabolism. I consume about 2000 - 2200 calories per day (I know because I keep a food journal) . I am quite overweight; clinically morbidly obese.

The only time I was normal weight I was also a chainsmoker. I gave up smoking 2o years ago and the pounds kept piling on. Officially I need to lose 100 lbs.

Here are my vital stats as of March 12, 2009: BP 110/73; blood sugar 102; strong, normal heart (based on complete cardio workout, MRI, stress test, EKG on March 10) and a normal risk for heart disease given my age and weight and menopausal status. My only problem is an elevated cholesterol which I've had all my life, even during my skinny days, and which runs in the family.

I lose weight very slowly, but my handsome skinny husband is supportive and thinks I am a goddess. I am attractive and well-groomed, with a cheerful disposition except when I see the fat haters rear their ugly heads.

It's open season on fatties because all other hateful remarks About race, color, religious
affiliation and sexual orientation are taboo.

All I know is, if oneof you fat haters were to spit out your filthy words to me to my face, you'd get knocked into next week...or, I may just have to sit on you!!!
01:31 PM on 03/23/2009
Well Funded Researchers discover that hitting yourself in the head with a hammer may cause brain damage.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
09:30 AM on 03/23/2009
Duh, of course obesity is or can be as bad for you as smoking. Fat is poison that weighs down your organs and causes a devastating strain on their ability to function. Common sense. Overeating is an addiction just like smoking.
09:04 AM on 03/22/2009
The most annoying aspect of all this "fat hatred" is that it's allowed to encourage bigotry and prejudice in our society against others; based on NOTHING else but what they LOOK Like...

It's amazing the unmitigated GALL people have-- to say that they are merely "concerned for fat people's HEALTH". That being fat is always, in every case, without exception - UN-healthy. And of course they believe the MYTH that fat people cause insurance rates to go up... [rolls eyes] yeah right, corporate greed and a horrific health care industry has NOTHING to do with that; it's fat people! LOL

Health (good AND bad) is based on *many* factors, not merely what the scale says.

There is ** not one single disease ** that is specifically caused by being fat, or only
gotten by people who are fat.
NOT ONE. Look it up. I DARE YOU... "raising the risk" is NOT the same as CAUSING some health issues.
* Skiing * raising the risk of injury and death as well...have you not read the headlines lately?

Diabetes, heart problems, BP problems, etc affect JUST AS MANY average weight and thin people
as fatter people. Don't buy into the bigotry.
I
f you are a fat hater, a bigoted, prejudiced prick... just SAY so and spare us the phony concern about fat people's health or the money they cost others. Just be happy being the a** that you are.
01:47 PM on 03/23/2009
OK, so the correlation between obesity and say, type II diabetes, is just that, a correlation? Thin people have no where near the rate of type II diabetes as obese people, contrary to your statement above. Your denial at the problems caused by obesity is astounding. Just watch an obese person try to walk up a flight of stairs or try to play with their child in a park, it's terribly sad to watch.

I will admit to a prejudice against fat people in certain circumstances, mainly at airports. I spend a fortune more for airplane tickets because on several times I have had someone who did not fit in their seat spill over into my seat. Then they always asked me for the aisle seat. Sorry, I'm not going to be trapped in my seat.
03:15 AM on 03/25/2009
Read AbbieHoffman's comment and my additional comment to her comment. Fabulousat52-I'd suggest you learn from the gorillas.
10:29 PM on 03/21/2009
I'm sure tax payers paid for this study. As if we didn't know.
Talk about PORK.
Yes, I meant the pun.
09:10 AM on 03/24/2009
There is FREE - NO COST to the patient (footed by me and the general public's taxes) surgery (stomache stapling) being administered to people down here in So. Florida. I am having to pay for other people's bad habits......this is wrong. FOOD ADDICTION=DRUG ADDICITION. YOU CHOSE TO BE FAT.
06:35 PM on 03/21/2009
Really? They just found that out now?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Budokan
Professional science fiction/fantasy writer
04:08 PM on 03/21/2009
Ya think? So is falling asleep on railroad tracks.

http://kennethmarkhoover.com
10:16 AM on 03/21/2009
For Godssakes people... Stop buying into the bigotry.

educate yourselves!

http://www.naafaonline.com/dev2/
01:20 AM on 03/22/2009
Are you out of your mind? NAAFA or whatever it is. This nation consists of 31% clinically obese and 33% substantially overweight people. 60plus% of the population is unhealthy by definition. And you're advocating that we should accept this as a fact of life and live with it? That is like committing a slow suicide. And don't you dare suggesting that everyone is suffering from a friggin' thyroid problem. If one eats like a pig, he or she eventually will look like a big pig, or even an elephant, never mind the political correctness crap. Gluttony is a nationwide epidemic which needs to be dealt with asap! We're the laughing stock of the world!
11:31 AM on 03/22/2009
Did you actually READ the NAAFA site?
Or are you just spewing your hatred regardless of what you may find there?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Kungfublood
09:35 AM on 03/21/2009
This begs the question; what are the effects of second hand obesity?
05:22 PM on 03/21/2009
Lol, I still wasn't entirely sold on the idea of secondhand smoking. I practically grew up with my grandparents, who smoke three cartons a week, and I'm still in one piece.
01:47 PM on 03/23/2009
Airline rage.
09:13 AM on 03/24/2009
I dread sitting next to a hippo
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
07:39 AM on 03/21/2009
Is that supposed to be a surprise? I remember when I saw Spike Lee's documentary "When the Levees Broke", one of the things that I noticed about New Orleans - aside from the destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina and the government's non-response - was the obesity prevalent in the city. A report in December ranked Louisiana as the unhealthiest state in the country. Coincidence?*

*I suspect that Bobby Jindal's policies have contributed.
10:59 PM on 03/23/2009
Bobby Jindal had nothing to do with it. Southern food has everything to do with it. Too much fat/salt/sugar, and next to no vegetables (and any fruits/vegetables eaten have to be made unhealthy first, think broccoli and cheese). Southern food is extremely tasty, and we eat way too much of it. Combine this with a near hatred of drinking water (one either drinks sweet tea or coke), and obesity is bound to happen.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
04:03 PM on 03/25/2009
And food cooked to DEATH. No nutrients left in it when it's done cooking for ten hours. But every once in a while...yummy!!!
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derrickhoyle
...it's a league game, Smokey.
03:56 PM on 03/19/2009
Smokers are not a constitutionally-protected class of people. I would think that would be different with the obese, as some have out-of-whack metabolisms that can't be controlled. Most obese Americans, however, can do something about it.
09:15 AM on 03/24/2009
stop with the "out-of-whack" metabolism excuse...geeez.
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Jordan Conaway
actor/comic
03:48 PM on 03/19/2009
well duh who ever thought it was a good thing?
03:34 PM on 03/19/2009
So, when will they begin discriminating against the overweight in terms of employment, health insurance, and housing - as they now do with smokers?
10:12 AM on 03/21/2009
Where have YOU been? Fat discrimination has been around forever!

2 Women apply for a receptionist's position in a professional office: BOTH are Well Groomed, Educated, Qualified, Personable and prepared to meet the demands of the job.

However, one is a little more experienced-- attractive, but about 40 lbs over-weight;

and one is somewhat less experienced-- but attractive, thin and busty (read "sexy")....

Guess who gets the job, time and time and time again?
09:16 AM on 03/24/2009
fatitude is a matter of choice - 100%.
02:26 PM on 03/19/2009
When I lived in Europe, the most common thing I heard was people saying, "But you're so thin for an American!" followed by a long diatribe on American love of fast food and processed food and hatred of exercize. It was pretty embarassing.

Then again, THEY all chain smoke starting at about age 12, so you know, it was kind of a pot calling the kettle black situation.