US researchers said that the country's obesity problem may
be more serious than previously believed and that a vast majority
of adults in the United States are at risk of becoming overweight
or obese.
In a government study that followed 4,000 participants over
a 30-year period, researchers found that ninety percent of men
and seventy percent of women were overweight or later became
overweight.
"National surveys and other studies have told us that the
United States has a major weight problem, but this study suggests
that we could have an even more serious degree of overweight
and obesity (cases) over the next few decades," said Elizabeth
Nabel, director of the US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Excess weight and obesity increase the risk of poor health
and can lead to diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease,
stroke, breathing problems and some cancers, Nabel said.
"We hope these results will serve as a wake-up call to Americans
of all ages."
The study's results, which were published in this week's issue
of the Annals of Internal Medicine, were based on assessments
of body mass index, a standard measure of weight relative to
height.
The volunteers for the study were white, from the town of
Framingham in the northeastern state of Massachusetts. Researchers
said their study might underestimate the problem among Hispanic
and African-American communities, which tend to have higher
rates of excess weight.
According to the government's National Center for Health Statistics,
an estimated 65 percent of US adults over the age of 20 are
either overweight or obese, with 30 percent of adults considered
obese.
The study found that making it to middle age at a healthy
weight was no guarantee for staying at that weight. About one
in five women and one in four men in the study deteriorated
during a four year period, gaining excess weight or becoming
obese.