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Bad
Habits Faulted for
One-Third of American Deaths
Poor eating habits, lack of exercise
and smoking are to blame for more than a third of all deaths in
the United States.
Tobacco continues to be the number
one killer. It was responsible for 435,000 deaths -- or 18.1 percent
of all fatalities -- in the year 2000, says a report in the March
10 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The study was done by researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Poor diet and lack of physical
activity, taken together because of their impact on heart disease,
stroke and other cardiovascular conditions, was a close second,
causing 400,000 deaths, or 16.6 percent of the total.
Alcohol came in a rather distant
third. About 85,000 Americans drank themselves to death that year,
3.5 percent of all deaths, the report says.
In fourth place were microbial
infections such as influenza and pneumonia, which caused 75,000
deaths.
Then came toxic agents such as
pollutants and asbestos (55,000 deaths); motor vehicle accidents
(43,000); firearms (29,000); sexual behavior that led to diseases
such as AIDS (20,000); and illicit drug use (17,000).
So, a lot of Americans would live
longer if they paid attention to the longstanding advice on the
value of diet and exercise, says study leader Ali H. Mokdad, chief
of the CDC's Behavioral Surveillance Branch.
"Americans just haven't changed
their behavior enough," he says.
Many are trying, Mokdad says. He
cites a 1999 report showing that more than 75 percent of Americans
were trying to lose weight. "But only 20 percent were doing it,"
he adds.
U.S. health officials, including
CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding, discussed the new findings
Tuesday at a news conference in Washington, D.C., where they unveiled
a public service ad campaign to get Americans to pay attention
to the dangers of inactivity and obesity, the Associated Press
reports.
The overall mortality picture hasn't
changed much during the past decade, says Dr. J. Michael McGinnis,
senior vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. He
did a comparable study in 1990, and is co-author of an editorial
accompanying the Mokdad report.
But some trends have changed, he
says.
The two most noticeable changes
are that "the impact of diet and lack of physical activity has
increased as a source of preventable mortality, and it appears
that there has been a slight decline in the contribution of sexual
behavior, a change triggered by AIDS," McGinnis says.
It's vital that Americans improve
their diet and exercise habits, but "these things don't turn on
a dime," he says. "It's like turning a battleship."
Yet tobacco use is a prime example
of how such changes can occur, McGinnis says. When the U.S. Surgeon
General issued the 1964 landmark report on tobacco and its health
risks, 64 percent of Americans smoked. Now 23 percent do -- still
too many, but a remarkable reduction, he says.
The problem, McGinnis says, is
that poor dietary habits are built into the American way of life,
and "systematically, over the last 50 years, we have engineered
physical activity out of our environment."
"It is vitally important that we
deal with these things as cultural, not individual, choices,"
he says.
The CDC itself offers a model of
how a large organization can promote a healthy lifestyle, Mokdad
says. The food service vendor at its Atlanta headquarters offers
a large variety of fruits, vegetables and other healthful choices.
Employees are given time during the workday to exercise, and there
is a free health club available to them. Smoking is banned in
all buildings and soon will be forbidden on the entire campus.
"Corporations are starting to realize
that such measures can save money," Mokdad says. "The money that
goes into prevention reduces medical costs."
More information
You can learn more about the benefits
of a healthy lifestyle and how to achieve it from the American
Heart Association or check out our YourHealth
and Fitness
sections for more info.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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