Injuries Are Deadlier for
Obese People, Study Says
Obese people who suffer critical injuries
are much more likely to die than thinner victims because their
overall health tends to be worse and surgery is riskier, a study
said.
Obesity -- which has reached epidemic
proportions in developed nations -- can reduce lung capacity and
causes heart problems that can worsen the outcome of an injury.
In a 2002 study of 242 Los Angeles
trauma patients, 63 of whom were obese, researchers concluded
that rates of multiple organ failure and death were significantly
higher among the heavier patients.
"Obesity, as an independent risk
factor, carries a nearly six-fold increase in mortality rate,"
said study author Angela Neville of Los Angeles County and the
University of Southern California Medical Center, Los Angeles.
The excess fat carried by obese
patients also made emergency surgery more difficult, the report
published in The Archives of Surgery medical journal said.
Nearly 19 percent of the U.S. population
is obese, the report said.
Reference
Source 89
September 21, 2004
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