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Obesity
Experts Offer
Suggestions For Prevention
A doctor, an activist for fat people
and a McDonald's dietitian were among experts who offered a wide
menu of ideas for shrinking the bulging waistlines that have made
obesity the No. 2 cause of death in America.
Americans gain two pounds a year
between the ages of 20 and 60, putting them at risk for diabetes,
heart disease and other serious ailments, Dr. Xavier Pi-Sunyer
told a conference at the State University of New York's Downstate
Medical Center in Brooklyn.
"We shouldn't be gaining anything,"
Pi-Sunyer, director of an obesity research center, said in an
interview. "We have to focus on preventing that weight gain because
it's so hard to take it off later."
He called for a nationwide education
effort, "to make people restrained eaters in an environment where
unhealthy food is so cheap and tastes so good."
Claude Coliman, a regional minority
health consultant for the U.S. government, said changing eating
habits was difficult in low-income neighborhoods like the one
outside the auditorium, where multifamily homes packed streets
dotted with fried chicken and pizza restaurants.
"You have a lack of supermarkets
offering healthier food in some neighborhoods," she noted. "You
have a lack of fitness centers."
"If everything that's around you
is unhealthy and high-calorie food, it's hard to stick to a good
diet," agreed Deja Butts, a high school student studying health
sciences.
"In every store you see the 25-cent
juice and chips that are four bags for a dollar. It's available,
it's inexpensive and you're going to go for it."
UNHEALTHY ADVERTISING
Several of the 250 health professionals
and students at the conference complained about the prevalence
of advertising for unhealthy food. But Patricia Baird, a dietitian
who discussed items recently unveiled by the McDonald's Corp.
hamburger chain as healthier menu choices, said Americans were
too quick to pin the blame for obesity on corporations.
"I believe in free choices," said
Baird. "As a former fat person, my choice was to eat four helpings
of lasagna, three helpings of potatoes and two helpings of roast
beef. Did I eat the salads my mother put on the table? No. Did
my sister? Yes. Was I fat while she was thin? You bet."
Another expert said concerns about
obesity were overblown.
"When you talk about obesity being
an epidemic, I don't know about that," said Sandy Schaffer, president
of the New York chapter of the National Association to Advance
Fat Acceptance.
"Not everybody that's fat is unhealthy,"
said Schaffer, an aerobics instructor who wears a stout size 24.
"I'm big but I'm healthy. At this size I can move and I'm physically
fit. You have to separate out diet from exercise."
Harold W. Kohl II, an epidemiologist
at the Centers for Disease Control, said obesity had reached epidemic
proportions. But he agreed that many experts did not focus enough
on exercise.
"Anything people can do to engineer
physical activity back into their daily life is absolutely critical,"
he said. "It's important to work 30 minutes of physical activity
into your day."
Dr. Clinton D. Brown, the conference
chairman, said many such gatherings will be needed nationwide
to get Americans to change their habits.
"People are finally realizing that
obesity is a big problem," he said. "We need to focus our resources
and make a community effort."
Reference
Source 89
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