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Obesity
Tops Smoking As Risk
LOS
ANGELES (AP) - Obese adults have more chronic health problems
than smokers, heavy drinkers or the poor, according to a study
released Wednesday.
The report
by the RAND institute in Santa Monica found that obese people
have on average nearly twice the chronic health troubles of people
of normal weight.
``We didn't
expect this big difference,'' said Roland Sturm, a RAND economist
and lead author of the survey, which was published in the latest
edition of the British journal Public Health.
The study
also found that smoking harms the health of women more than men,
with female smokers having about 40 percent more chronic health
problems than nonsmokers. The figure was 30 percent for men.
Sturm said
the survey, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, demonstrates
that public health officials should intensify their fight against
obesity to levels that at least match the public health campaign
against smoking.
The study
found that more people are overweight or obese than are those
collectively who smoke, drink heavily and live below the federal
poverty line.
The telephone
survey, which was conducted in 1998, asked 9,585 adults about
their weight, height, smoking and drinking habits, income and
quality of life. They also were asked if they had any of 17 chronic
health problems, including asthma, cancer, diabetes and heart
problems.
Obesity was
determined by finding a respondent's body mass index, a figure
derived by calculating a person's weight in pounds by 703 and
dividing that result by height in inches squared.
People of
normal weight have a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9; those considered
overweight score between 25 and 29.9; obese people are between
30 and 34.9 and very obese people are over 35.
The survey
found that 59 percent of Americans are at least overweight - a
figure that is in line with other recent studies.
The study
found that people of normal weight had an average of 1.1 chronic
conditions. Overweight people had an average of an additional
0.2 chronic conditions, obese people had an additional 0.6 chronic
conditions and the very obese had 0.9 more conditions.
The study
showed the obese tend to have slightly more health problems than
people living in poverty and far more than daily smokers or heavy
drinkers.
On
the Net: http://www.rand.org
Reference
Source 102
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