

|
 |

Overweight
and Obesity
Recommendations
The Surgeon
General's Call To Action To Prevent and Decrease Overweight and Obesity
Overweight and Obesity: At a Glance
THE FACTS ABOUT OVERWEIGHT AND OBESITY
- 61% of adults in the United States were overweight or obese (BMI >
25)* in 1999.
- 13% of children aged 6 to 11 years and 14% of adolescents aged 12
to 19 years were overweight* in 1999. This prevalence has nearly tripled
for adolescents in the past 2 decades.
- The increases in overweight and obesity cut across all ages, racial
and ethnic groups, and both genders.
- 300,000 deaths each year in the United States are associated with
obesity.
- Overweight and obesity are associated with heart disease, certain
types of cancer, type 2 diabetes, stroke, arthritis, breathing problems,
and psychological disorders, such as depression.
- The economic cost of obesity in the United States was about $117 billion
in 2000.
HEALTH DISPARITIES
Based on national survey data collected between 1988 and 1994:
- The prevalence of overweight and obesity increases until about age
60, after which it begins to decline.
- In women, overweight and obesity are higher among members of racial
and ethnic minority populations than in non-Hispanic white women.
- In men, Mexican Americans have a higher prevalence of overweight and
obesity than non-Hispanic whites or non-Hispanic blacks. The prevalence
of overweight and obesity in non-Hispanic white men is greater than
in non-Hispanic black men.
- 69% of non-Hispanic black women are overweight or obese compared to
58% of non-Hispanic black men.
- 62% of non-Hispanic white men are overweight or obese compared to
47% of non-Hispanic white women. However, when looking at obesity alone
(BMI > 30)*, slightly more non-Hispanic white women are obese compared
to non-Hispanic white men (23%; 21%).
- For all racial and ethnic groups combined, women of lower socioeconomic
status (income < 130 percent of poverty threshold) are approximately
50% more likely to be obese than those of higher socioeconomic status.
- Mexican American boys tend to have a higher prevalence of overweight
than non-Hispanic black or non-Hispanic white boys.
- Non-Hispanic black girls tend to have a higher prevalence of overweight
than Mexican American or non-Hispanic white girls.
- Non-Hispanic white adolescents from lower income families experience
a greater prevalence of overweight than those from higher income families.
CAUSES OF OVERWEIGHT AND OBESITY
- Overweight and obesity result from an imbalance involving excessive
calorie consumption and/or inadequate physical activity.
- For each individual, body weight is the result of a combination of
genetic, metabolic, behavioral, environmental, cultural, and socioeconomic
influences.
- Behavioral and environmental factors are large contributors to overweight
and obesity and provide the greatest opportunity for actions and interventions
designed for prevention and treatment.
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND INACTIVITY
- It is recommended that Americans accumulate at least 30 minutes (adults)
or 60 minutes (children) of moderate physical activity most days of
the week. More may be needed to prevent weight gain, to lose weight,
or to maintain weight loss.
- Less than 1/3 of adults engage in the recommended amounts of physical
activity.
- Many people live sedentary lives; in fact, 40% of adults in the United
States do not participate in any leisure time physical activity.
- 43% of adolescents watch more than 2 hours of television each day.
- Physical activity is important in preventing and treating overweight
and obesity and is extremely helpful in maintaining weight loss, especially
when combined with healthy eating.
*Please see fact sheet "Measuring Overweight and Obesity" for a definition
of Body Mass Index (BMI).
[back to recommendations]
|
|