Posts tagged "obesity"
A new Annals of Internal Medicine article describes a study that compares two employer-sponsored financial incentive programs for promoting weight loss among obese employees.
Individual vs. Group Incentive for Weight Loss | BioStatMatt (guess which one works best?)

The report from the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) finds that too little is being done for adults who are severely overweight. NHS services are “extremely patchy”, it says, even though a quarter of all adults are obese and it is estimated that by 2050 most of the population will be.

Professor John Wass, chair of the working party that produced the report, says there is a real need for leadership. The report calls for a senior figure in government who will take charge of obesity issues across all departments – from education to health, to agriculture and work and pensions.

Wass says we could learn from the US, where Michael Bloomberg, mayor of New York, and Michelle Obama in the White House have been leading a successful fight against obesity. He said: “I think we could have a senior figure in London, rather like the mayor of New York, who has led on having smaller measures of Coca-Cola in cups and other things. Michelle Obama has had a huge effect on obesity and getting things labelled.

UK needs its own Michelle Obama to tackle obesity, say doctors | Society | The Guardian
“In prior years, epidemiologists dismissed the idea that anti-obesity efforts could stymie progress against hunger, particularly because these were believed to be problems of different socioeconomic classes or communities–hence easy to target. But new data from the U.S. and abroad suggest that a surprising number of households experience both periods of food insecurity and long-term obesity, presumably because cheap calories are sought after by those who can’t afford nutritious calories, and such cheap calories lead to longer-term adiposity (but this mechanism needs to be further detailed; at present, the “dual burden” appears to be an observation alone).” (via Perversities in obesity and hunger prevention | [ EpiAnalysis ])

“In prior years, epidemiologists dismissed the idea that anti-obesity efforts could stymie progress against hunger, particularly because these were believed to be problems of different socioeconomic classes or communities–hence easy to target. But new data from the U.S. and abroad suggest that a surprising number of households experience both periods of food insecurity and long-term obesity, presumably because cheap calories are sought after by those who can’t afford nutritious calories, and such cheap calories lead to longer-term adiposity (but this mechanism needs to be further detailed; at present, the “dual burden” appears to be an observation alone).” (via Perversities in obesity and hunger prevention | [ EpiAnalysis ])

Yes, I know what you are thinking, and you are right: Republican states have higher prevalence rates of obesity. The author makes the point right after that graph.

Yes, I know what you are thinking, and you are right: Republican states have higher prevalence rates of obesity. The author makes the point right after that graph.

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