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Joel John Roberts

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Fast Food Nation: Homelessness Creates Obesity

Posted: 05/24/2012 1:09 pm

The image of hunger simmering in our consciousness by international relief agencies has been a picture of an impoverished child with a bloated stomach in some faraway nation that we can barely find on the map.

That sad photo of hunger, however, does not accurately reflect America's hungry population, particularly among the homeless.

A recent study by researchers from Harvard and Oxford reveal an almost paradoxical conclusion: One third of America's homeless population is obese.

How can people struggling with an impoverished life on the streets, not even knowing when or where their next meal will be, also battle with obesity? How can hungry homeless people be fat?

Doesn't overweight homeless Americans reinforce the perspective that some people within the homeless population are just lazy, and really not hurting, let alone hungry?

In today's health-conscious American society, extra weight on your body does not always signify extra money in your wallet. Being overweight is not a reflection of wealth. In fact, the opposite is sometimes more true.

Where do the over-priced, extremely healthy boutique grocery stores, like Whole Foods Market, build their stores? In the more expensive neighborhoods in town. And who shops at these stores? Skinny people with fat wallets.

Sure, there are overweight Americans with similarly overweight bank accounts, but for more and more people obesity is becoming a common factor for impoverished Americans.

Americans with very little income cannot afford healthy Whole Foods Market, so they resort to cheap food high on carbs but low on nutrition or frequent fast food restaurants with their 99 cent menus of products containing 99,000 calories.

And for those homeless Americans who struggle with extreme poverty, the barriers called depression, sleep deprivation, and stress just exacerbate the fight to stay physically healthy.

No wonder why more and more homeless Americans are becoming obese. They have no money for healthy food, and struggle with homeless living conditions that just make life worse.

I think the world of homelessness really needs the help of Richard Simmons, that quirky, sometimes obnoxious, but amazingly motivating health guru, to redesign the dinner menus of homeless shelters and train struggling Americans to live healthy lives while still possessing skinny wallets.

So while we, who work to house homeless Americans, would preach, "Say, farewell to the streets," Simmons would preach, "Say, farewell to fat."

Both messages are important.

 
 
 

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The image of hunger simmering in our consciousness by international relief agencies has been a picture of an impoverished child with a bloated stomach in some faraway nation that we can barely find on...
The image of hunger simmering in our consciousness by international relief agencies has been a picture of an impoverished child with a bloated stomach in some faraway nation that we can barely find on...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tendril
imperfect at best and proud of it
06:53 AM on 05/30/2012
Poor nutrition, reliance on cheap, fast, high calorie, high fat food, binge eating when food is available and sleeping/sedentary lifestyle due to depression and major mental illness make obesity a problem for the homeless.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Katrin55
A man's reach should exceed his grasp
02:45 PM on 05/25/2012
Let's also remember that there are areas called "food deserts" where a homeless person or even a working poor person with a roof over his head cannot buy a fresh vegetable to save his life. There aren't many full service grocery stores in the inner cities of America.
02:25 PM on 05/25/2012
This article is a waste of good bandwidth. Yes, there's an obesity problem among the homeless, but the solution isn't an exercise program, no matter how motivational. It's treatment for the mental illness and addiction that make it impossible to make good food choices, when choices exist. It's improvement in food aid, in quality and quantity, to soup kitchens and shelters. It's improved access to care to manage chronic illnesses, which contribute to extreme poverty and homelessness. It's an increase in support services, including direct cash payments to recipients, to help people get off the streets and begin to bring order to their lives.
09:10 AM on 05/31/2012
homeless-- like the secretary who lost a 20 yr. job when her boss went out of business?
all the workers who have been unemployed for so long that their benefits ran out?
now you think they are homeless because they are mentally ill ?-- or addicted?
Some homelsess are mentally ill-- been that way since Reagan purged the mental hospitals because private care would be so much better and cost efficient (sound familiar) -- of course the private system wa set up or funded.
08:59 AM on 05/25/2012
There is no place to store or cook your boneless free-range organic chicken breasts on the street.

Donated doughnuts and day-old bread make up the bulk of what's donated foodwise. If I were on the street, I'd also be drinking cheap soft drinks for the calories.

The answer: nutritious and filling soup made from donated fresh foods. From a soup kitchen. There should be one operating out of every church kitchen in the United States to feed the flocks of poor families and children, homeless veterans, displaced workers, and everyone else who can't get a break in this society. That's what a real Food Revolution would look like.
06:01 AM on 05/25/2012
I struggled to find reasons why homeless people are obese in your article. Don't refer us to the Havard or Oxford article, tell us why in your article. What is the point of writing an article if you can't give reasons and justify your inquiry.
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Versandra
author, health enthusiast, life-changer
08:52 AM on 05/25/2012
I am a homeless success story and holistic health expert and the simple answer is poor nutrition is directly related to diabetes, obesity, poor mental health and early death. Our bodies must receive proper nutrients (not in most fast food) in order to function as they were created to. Compromising our health can result in homelessness due to the added medical costs associated with treating chronic disease and poor mental health, which could be minimized when we realize our health is our wealth. I've been there and done that and choose to help others be more healthy while creating true wealth. The causes of homelessness can me multifaceted but when we love ourselves enough to at least investigate better food and nutrition options we are a step closer to breaking the poverty mentality which keeps us from thriving in life. I lost my mind while homeless but I got a new one, a second chance at living and I will never compromise my health again.
04:37 AM on 05/28/2012
How does poor nutrition make someone obese? Isnt it that, if you have poor nutrition then you lack some of the vital components which make you grow big. It would have been more understandable if you had said that they eat food with high quantity of fats since most discarded food picked up by homeless prople is usually discarded fast food.
03:23 AM on 05/25/2012
when you are poor you can only afford fatty foods i live on bologna and ramen noodles
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
11:10 PM on 05/24/2012
This is ridiculous.
Homeless people need homes. I can't imagine trying to diet while homeless are they supposed to take up RUNNING? THis lifestyle is about living on the margins and as such the priorities are different.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nitza417
09:58 PM on 05/24/2012
ANother thing I've noticed is that a lot of these cheap food and unhealthy restaurants take the food stamp card... again it is a matter of convenience... and I guess you can say lack of education... in some states they even give you checks for the farmers market... so... we need to stop making excuses.. and people need to start taking responsibility for their weight issues...
10:35 AM on 05/25/2012
Just how old are you? You sound like a person who feels like they know everything and yet has been handed everything on a silver platter. You are also apparently unable to read. To paraphrase lateralmobility from above, where exactly do you expect the homeless to refrigerate, store and cook their healthy foods while they live on the street?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nitza417
03:22 PM on 05/25/2012
mmm I actually grew very poor... I knew what it was to go to bed hungry.. many times... and I am speaking in general about low income families.. I understand the homeless part of it... sans the no kitchen...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nitza417
09:55 PM on 05/24/2012
What a croc... While there may be some truth to this.. the fact is that low income people receive food stamps... and plenty... while I am penny pinching doing my groceries they are walking out with cart full of steaks and shrimp and other expensive foods that I can not afford... additionally is a thing of convenience.. it is easier to throw a bowl of cereal at a kid than to make him a healthy breakfast... A box of cereal is running in the high 5's... the same five dollars you can use to buy a carton of eggs, and whole wheat bread...
11:10 PM on 05/24/2012
Oh Lordy. I don't even know where to begin. Making educated choices about food requires first literacy, which requires an adequate education which many people don't get. Then, with that literacy comes access to accurate information about food choices, which is elusive if you're working so hard to make ends meet that you can barely do anything productive at the end of the day.

Beyond that, why do we require Herculean effort on the part of the poor to learn, to do, to seek information, resources, education or lest we call them "lazy?"

Your post is nonsense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeni O'Callaghan
These are the cheap seats, not Mount Sinai.
03:29 AM on 05/25/2012
The key word in this article is HOMELESS, not poor. This works if you're poor and have somewhere to put the food you buy that can spoil. Not if you've got nowhere.
And fast food places take the EBT card, yes, but you can't use your food stamps. It's to use your cash benefits. By law, you cannot purchase hot prepared foods with food stamps. Cold prepared, yes.