Obesity
Obesity is a condition in which the natural
energy reserve of a mammal (such as a human), which is stored
in fat, is expanded far beyond usual levels to the point where
it causes health stress. Obesity in wild animals is relatively
rare, but it is common in domestic animals like barrows and household
pets who may be castrated, overfed and underexercised.
Definition
Obesity is a concept that is being continually
redefined. In humans, the most common statistical measurement of
obesity is the body mass index (BMI).
A person with a BMI over 25.0 kg/m2 is considered
overweight; a BMI over 30.0 kg/m2 is considered obese. A further
threshold at 40.0 kg/m2 is identified as urgent morbidity risk.
The American Institute for Cancer Research considers a BMI between
18.5 and 25 to be an ideal target for a healthy individual (although
several sources consider a person with a BMI of less than 20 to
be underweight). The BMI was created in the 19th century by the
Belgian statistician Adolphe Quetelet. The cut-off points between
categories are occasionally redefined, and may differ from country
to country. In June 1998 the NIH brought official US category
definitions into line with those used by the WHO, moving the American
'overweight' threshold from BMI 27 to BMI 25. About 30m Americans
moved from "ideal" weight to being 1-10 pounds "overweight"
as a result.
The BMI cannot offer a complete diagnosis, in
that it ignores fat distribution within the body (see central
obesity), and the relative fat-muscle-bone contributions to total
body weight. A powerful athlete may be classified as obese by
the BMI due to heavy musculature, while a false 'normal' may be
diagnosed in the case of an elderly person with very low lean
mass, which masks excess adiposity. On its own, a BMI score is
therefore inadequate as a diagnostic tool. In practice, in most
examples of overweight that may be harmful to health, both doctor
and patient can see 'by eye' that fat is an issue. In these cases,
BMI thresholds provide simple targets all patients can understand.
Doctors may also use a simple measure of waist circumference (which
is a better predictor of complications such insulin resistance
due to visceral fat - see Janssen et al, 2004); 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.
Such clinical data is rarely available in the
statistical raw materials required for large public health studies,
however - whereas height and weight is commonly recorded. For
this essential reason, BMI remains the most commonly-used approach
for public health studies, and the most useful for cross-border,
longitudinal and other types of comparative analysis.
Causes
Causative factors
Obesity is generally a result of a combination
of factors:
- Genetic predisposition
- Energy-rich diet
- Limited exercise and sedentary lifestyle
- Underlying illness (e.g. hypothyroidism)
- An eating disorder (such as binge eating disorder)
- Stressful mentality (debated)
Although there is no definitive explanation for
the recent epidemic of obesity, the evolutionary hypothesis comes
closest to providing some understanding of this phenomenon. In
times when food was scarce, the ability to take advantage of rare
periods of abundance and use such abundance by storing energy
efficiently was undoubtedly an evolutionary advantage. This is
precisely the opposite of what is required in a sedentary society,
where high-energy food is available in abundant quantities in
the context of decreased exercise. Although many people may have
a genetic propensity towards obesity, it is only with the reduction
in physical activity and a move towards high-calorie diets of
modern society that it has become widespread. Significant proportions
(up to 30%) of the population in wealthy countries are now obese,
and seen to be at risk of ill health (see e.g. Dr Joel Fuhrman.)
Eating disorders can lead to obesity, especially
binge eating disorder (BED). As the name indicates, patients with
this disorder are prone to overeat, often in binges. A proposed
mechanism is that the eating serves to reduce anxiety, and some
parallels with substance abuse can be drawn. An important additional
factor is that BED patients often lack the ability to recognize
hunger and satisfaction, something that is normally learnt in
childhood. Learning theory suggests that early childhood conceptions
may lead to an association between food and a calm mental state.
Some recent research has suggested that some human
obesity may be caused by a viral infection. The virus adenovirus
vectors AD-36 and AD-37 have been identified as a cause of obesity
in animals and as potential stimulants on human preadipocytes
(Vangipuram et al 2004). While these viruses occur in humans,
there is no clear evidence that their presence leads to in increased
risk of obesity.
Societal causes
While it is often quite 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 who is obese, they cannot
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 1960
almost the entire population was well fed, but not overweight.
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.
Researchers from the US Centers of Disease Control
and Prevention in Atlanta (Mokdad et al 2004) reported that approximately
400,000 US deaths annually were associated with poor diet and
little exercise, and that if the trend continued, this would be
500,000 in 2005, overtaking smoking as the leading cause of death.
These statistics are fiercely contested [1] (http://server1.consumerfreedom.com/article_detail.cfm/article/141).
Canada and Europe are somewhat behind the United
States, with the rest of the world mixed. Some nations like Egypt
and Mexico have also suffered from greatly increasing rates of
obesity.
There are a number of theories as to the cause
of this change since 1980. Most believe it is a combination of
various factors.
- One of the most important is the much lower
relative cost of foodstuffs: massive agricultural subsidies
in the United States and Europe have lead to food prices for
consumers being lower than at any point in history. Sugar and
corn syrup, two huge sources of calories are some of the most
subsidized products by the United States government.
- Increased marketing has also played a role.
In the early 1980s the Reagan administration lifted most regulations
pertaining to advertising to children. As a result the number
commercials seen by the average child increased greatly, and
a large proportion of these were *for fast food and candy.
- Changes in the price of mineral oil and petrol
are also believed to have had an effect, as unlike during the
1970s it is now affordable in the United States to drive everywhere
- at a time when public transit goes underused. At the same
time more areas have been built without sidewalks and parks.
- 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 has seen sales of generally unhealthy frozen meals
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
where 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: Russ Lopez, adjunct
assistant professor of environmental health, found that obesity
rates increase as urban sprawl increases. He puts this down
to less walking and less time for cooking.(American Journal
of Public Health Sept 2004)
- Since 1980 both sit-in and 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 in 1960
to over 600 today.
- Increased Food Production is a likely factor.
The U.S. makes three times more food than U.S. citizens eat.
Interestingly the vast increase in the number
of Americans who exercise and diet occurred before the increase
in obesity, and some scholars have even argued that these trends
actually encouraged obesity. Most diets fail, ending in binge
eating and an overall increase in weight. Similarly those who
workout but then stop can end up being fatter than those who never
exercised.
Poverty link?
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 2002 study [2] (http://roa.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/26/1/130)
found obese 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. Another
study finds women who marry into higher status predictably thinner
than women who married into lower status.
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