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Obesity Statitics: U.S. Obesity To Hit 42 Percent in 2050, Experts Say

First Posted: 11/13/10 11:19 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:10 PM ET

Obesity

Just over one-third of American adults are obese. Though alarmingly high, this rate has remained relatively steady over the past decade, leading some public health experts to suggest that the obesity epidemic has peaked.
 
Now, researchers at Harvard University are predicting that the worst is yet to come. If current trends continue, they say, the obesity rate in the U.S. won't level off until it reaches at least 42 percent, circa 2050.
 


"The recent slowdown in the increase in obesity prevalence is a natural part of the obesity epidemic reaching a saturation," says the lead author of the study, Alison Hill, a doctoral candidate in Harvard's department of biophysics. But, she adds, obesity rates "will still continue to increase, although at a slower rate, if no interventions are introduced."
 




This bleak forecast, which appears in a study published this week in the journal PLoS Computational Biology, is based on the social networks research of one of Hill's co-authors, Nicholas Christakis, MD, a professor of medical sociology at Harvard Medical School, in Boston. In a 2007 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Christakis and a colleague suggested that obesity can spread through social networks, much like the flu. In the new study, the researchers took this theory a step further and used the "infectious disease" model of obesity to predict future trends.
 

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Obesity rates have a tendency to snowball, they found, because a person's likelihood of becoming obese increases with each additional obese family member, friend, or acquaintance he or she has. What's more, obese people appear to have a stronger influence on their friends and family now than they did in 1971, when the earliest data used in the study was collected.
 

"Over the past 40 years, there has been a steady increase in the rate of infection, and it is now the highest it has been," Hill says. "What's changing over time is how much each obese friend influences you."
 
Unfortunately that influence doesn't work the other way around. Only weight gain -- not weight loss -- is "contagious," according to the study.
 
Hill and her colleagues predicted the national obesity rate by applying their social networks model to 40 years of obesity data from the Framingham Heart Study, which has followed several generations of people in a single Massachusetts town. (Obesity rates in that study have roughly mirrored national trends: 14 percent of the study participants were obese in 1971, but by 2000 that number had reached 30 percent.)


Obesity rates stabilize but remain high. 

Scott Kahan, MD, the co-director of the George Washington University Weight Management Center, in Washington, D.C., says that the new study is "worthwhile" but should be taken with a grain of salt.
 
The data the researchers used to make their projections were collected before the obesity epidemic became a major public health concern, Dr. Kahan notes, and anti-obesity interventions have since been ramped up.
 
"We're in a different place," he says. "We never addressed obesity until five years ago ... We're addressing policies and schools and social norms [now]."


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Just over one-third of American adults are obese. Though alarmingly high, this rate has remained relatively steady over the past decade, leading some public health experts to suggest that the obesit...
Just over one-third of American adults are obese. Though alarmingly high, this rate has remained relatively steady over the past decade, leading some public health experts to suggest that the obesit...
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10:46 PM on 12/09/2010
Obesity can be a difficult health issue to tackle. Several health problems such as Hypertension , Diabetes, etc are directly tied to the effect of obesity.

This condition should be handled with all seriousness it deserves and less complications would be recorded.

I have come across a very nice free e-book that has helped several people deal with their obesity problem. If you are interested to get a free copy of it Download it here
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
05:54 PM on 11/17/2010
our is a foie gras nation.
and no matter what any industry tells you, four words remain our path out of this crisis:
MOVE MORE EAT LESS
03:23 PM on 11/17/2010
I disagree totally. I think the percentage of obese Americans will be higher. I can't understand the difficulty that people have with moderating food and exercising regularly. It seems they would rather die early for a cheeseburger than live longer? Now a study says being friends with obese people can make non obese people fatter? Come on, really. Read for yourself-
http://www.angrytrainerfitness.com/2010/11/fat-friends/
12:52 AM on 11/17/2010
As morbidly obese people customarily die in their forties and fifties they will play a major role in inproving the fiscal solvancy of social security.
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
05:55 PM on 11/17/2010
interesting -- rather ebenneezerish, but interesting...
05:31 PM on 11/16/2010
No whining! Get off the victimhood kick and practice some self-reliance and self-dicipline. Think healthy food is expensive? Try beans and rice, in combination. Cheap, and great protein without the cholesterol. The government isn't your mommy.
04:32 PM on 11/16/2010
The obesity rate was at least 50% when I went to Disneyland a week ago. Severely overweight adults and children were everywhere, many of whom could hardly walk (including the children). It is simply baffling that this has happened. Is the answer really education? Do people honestly not know that donuts, nachos, and half pound burgers with fries result in weight gain? Or are they turning a blind eye and blaming it all on thyroid disorders? Maybe it just seems normal if everyone you know is 50-100 lbs overweight.
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usamade
12:43 PM on 11/16/2010
Quit putting hormones in our food!
12:28 PM on 11/16/2010
I read an article similar to this one that made a correlation between the increased rate of obesity and the occurrance of Type II Diabetes. This is a horrible epidemic and I think the approach we have to take to combat obesity as a society is threefold. The first step is education and giving people opportunities to learn and discuss the facts about what is good nutrition versus poor nutrition. This process has to start long before adulthood--I'm talking preschool and then continue throughout elementary and high school. The second step is to actually engage people in positive behavior--let's get REAL physical education back in school and incentivise employers to allow workers 30 minutes of exercise on the clock. And let's teach kids how to actually COOK for themselves using real, fresh food. When people know how to cook, it gives them real freedom in their eating choices. And the third step is to place a graduated tax on foods according to level of proccessing--i.e. foods that go from farm to table have no tax, and the foods processed the most (think frozen pizza and Velveeta) have the highest tax. This way, fresh, healthy choices will be affordable to everyone and highly processed choices will become what they need to be: once-in-a-while indulgences.
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Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
04:26 PM on 11/16/2010
yes, learning to cook would reduce the amount of food that people would eat. it delays the dining experience
10:28 AM on 11/16/2010
"Only weight gain -- not weight loss -- is "contagious," according to the study.
"
Hear that big pharma? The perception is contagion- time to start marketing a vaccination; maybe call it the "SuperSizeMe" pill since overweight seem to notice that type of marketing.
09:02 AM on 11/16/2010
Dr David Katz makes some excellent points in his "Exposed" article that ties in well with this
one. We're brainwashed because we're letting our taste-buds rule.
11:12 PM on 11/15/2010
Why do photos of fat people never have heads? Are these people so worthless that all we need to know about them is the size of their bellies? Do you remove their heads so we won't see them as human beings that might be our sisters, mothers, aunts, or sweethearts?
traceymarie
Independent to Dem in 2007
07:26 PM on 11/16/2010
maybe the obese people in the pictures did not want their identity shown.
10:55 PM on 11/15/2010
Part of our problem is many Americans are of the mindset that all food, no matter how awful, should be acceptable to everyone around them. If you are not willing to consume something slathered in glop or created at a factory farm then you are a snob with a problem. There is nothing wrong with refusing c$$p. After all, if someone offered to give you a free tank of gasoline loaded with genetically modified corn syrup would you accept?
nancynancy
Atheist.
08:13 AM on 11/15/2010
With Thanksgiving coming up, I think it's important to rethink this national food orgy that kicks off six weeks of nonstop gluttony. Don't cook a 20 pound turkey, don't prepare a gallon of stuffing and mashed potatoes and other starches, don't prepare half a dozen desserts. Instead, prepare a normal sized meal with no more than three courses and one medium sized portion for everyone.
06:13 AM on 11/15/2010
So, as a precaution, should I stop hanging out with all my fat friends?
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littlepuffycloud
I propose a toast to my self control...
06:20 PM on 11/14/2010
In June I cut my portion size in half, stopped eating sugar/candy and started walking my dog for 45 min a day. I eat lean meat, almonds,a ton of fruit and veggies, an English muffin w/ a little cream cheese once in a while and since then, I've lost nearly 20 lbs. It's our portion sizes, sugar consumption and lack of moving that is making us fat. I would bet anyone can lose weight if they cut their potions in half. I feel so much better and don't miss the sugar at all.