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Study
Says U.S. Teens Are Fattest
Teenagers in the United States have
higher rates of obesity than those in 14 other industrialized
countries, including France and Germany, a study of nearly 30,000
youngsters ages 13 and 15 found.
Among American 15-year-olds, 15
percent of girls and nearly 14 percent of boys were obese, and
31 percent of girls and 28 percent of boys were more modestly
overweight.
The findings are based on school
questionnaires given to youngsters in the 15 countries in 1997
and 1998. The study was led by Inge Lissau, a researcher at the
National Institute of Public Health in Copenhagen, Denmark, and
was published in the January issue of Archives of Pediatrics &
Adolescent Medicine.
The heaviest countries, based on
data from 15-year-olds, also included Greece, Portugal, Israel,
Ireland and Denmark.
U.S. teens were more likely than
those in other countries to eat fast food, snacks and sugary sodas
and were more likely to be driven to school and other activities,
contributing to a more sedentary lifestyle, said co-author Mary
Overpeck of the U.S. Maternal and Child Health Bureau.
"The rest of the world may be catching
up, but we're still in first place in a race that unfortunately
we shouldn't want to be winning," said Dr. David Ludwig, an obesity
researcher at Children's Hospital Boston who was not involved
in the study. He led a study published Monday in another journal,
Pediatrics, that found that nearly one-third of U.S. youngsters
eat fast food on any given day.
Lithuania had the lowest obesity
rates in the latest study. Among Lithuanian 15-year-olds, about
2 percent of girls and 0.8 percent of boys were obese, and 8 percent
of girls and 5 percent of boys were overweight.
That is probably because Lithuania
has fewer fast-food restaurants and its teens have less money
to buy snacks and fast food, Overpeck said.
In some countries, such as Ireland,
Portugal and Sweden, 13-year-old girls were more likely than 15-year-old
girls to be obese.
Among French 15-year-olds, 4 percent
of girls and almost 3 percent of boys were obese, and nearly 13
percent of girls and 10 percent of boys were overweight. Among
German 15-year-olds, about 5 percent of girls and boys were obese,
and nearly 15 percent of girls and 14 percent of boys were overweight.
The other countries studied were
Austria, Czech Republic, Flemish Belgium, Finland and Slovenia.
Overpeck said preliminary data
from more recent surveys show little if any change in rates among
the countries studied.
The World Health Organization last
year said obesity is no longer mostly an American problem but
is an increasing concern in Europe and other developed nations
because people are abandoning traditional dietary habits and adopting
more sedentary lifestyles.
Weight calculations were based
on teens' body-mass index, a height-weight ratio.
Countries with some of the heaviest
youngsters after the United States, based on data from 15-year-olds,
were:
_Greece: 5.5 percent of girls were
obese and about 16 percent were overweight; nearly 11 percent
of boys were obese and almost 29 percent were overweight.
_Portugal: nearly 7 percent of
girls were obese and almost 21 percent were overweight; about
5 percent of boys were obese and 14 percent were overweight.
_Israel: about 6 percent of girls
were obese and 16 percent were overweight; nearly 7 percent of
boys were obese and 20 percent were overweight;
_Ireland: nearly 5 percent of girls
were overweight and 14 percent were overweight; almost 3 percent
of boys were obese and 19 percent were overweight.
_Denmark: 6.5 percent of girls
were obese and 18 percent were overweight; about 3 percent of
boys were obese and 10 percent were overweight.
___
On the Net:
Archives: http://www.archpediatrics.com
World Health Organization: http://www.who.int/hpr/NPH/docs/gs_obesity.pdf
Reference
Source 102
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