Rise in US obesity likely due to decline in exercise, not over-eating
Date: Jul-08-2014A study from Stanford University reported in The American Journal of
Medicine suggests the rise in obesity in the US is likely due to increased sedentary
lifestyles across the nation, and not eating too many calories.
The researchers came to this conclusion after studying data for the last 20 years from the US
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) that shows there has been a sharp
decline in levels of leisure time physical activity among Americans - especially among young women
- accompanied by an increase in average body mass index (BMI), while calorie consumption has remained
somewhat steady.
Lead author Uri Ladabaum, Associate Professor of Medicine in Stanford University School of
Medicine, and colleagues analyzed trends in obesity, waistline obesity, physical activity and
calorie intake in American adults up to 2010.
In 2010 over half of American women reported no leisure-time exercise
More than half (51.7%) of female adults in the US reported no leisure-time physical activity in
2010. This proportion is nearly treble what it was in 1994, when 19.1% of adult American women
reported doing no exercise.
For men, while the proportion who reported no leisure-time physical activity in 2010 was
lower than for women, at 43.5%, this is nearly four times the 11.4% of men who said they did not
exercise in 1994.
When they analyzed the data by subgroups, the team found women, and black and Mexican-American
women in particular, showed the greatest decreases in reported exercise.
BMI and average waist size have also climbed steadily
Meanwhile, across the same period, the US saw average body mass index rise by an average of
0.37% per year, with the most dramatic increase being in young women.
A person is considered abdominally obese if their waist circumference is 88 cm (34.65 in) or more for a woman, and 102 cm (40.15 in) or more for a man.
The team also looked at changes in abdominal obesity, which some consider an independent risk
factor for death, even among people with normal BMIs - thus being "apple-shaped" is considered
riskier than "pear-shaped" for the same height and weight.
A person is considered abdominally obese if their waist circumference is 88 cm (34.65 in) or
more for a woman, and 102 cm (40.15 in) or more for a man.
The researchers found that average waist size went up by 0.37% per year for women and 0.27% for
men.
They found that abdominal obesity has gone in both normal-weight and overweight women, while for men it only went up in overweight men.
Prof. Ladabaum says these changes have occurred in the absence of significant changes in
calorie consumption:
"At the population level, we found a significant association between the level of leisure-time
physical activity, but not daily caloric intake, and the increases in both BMI and waist
circumference."
Although he and his colleagues did not investigate the types of food consumed, they were able
to calculate the total daily calorie, fat, carbohydrate, and protein consumption over the period.
They found these have not changed significantly over the last 20 years.
"It remains controversial whether overweight alone increases mortality risk," says
Prof.Ladabaum, "but the trends in abdominal obesity among the overweight are concerning in light
of the risks associated with increased waist circumference independent of BMI."
'Troublesome trends in younger adults'
While increased calorie intake is often blamed for the current obesity epidemic in the US, the
researchers say they found no evidence of this in their study, as Prof. Ladabaum concludes:
"Our findings do not support the popular notion that the increase of obesity in the United
States can be attributed primarily to sustained increase over time in the average daily caloric
intake of Americans."
He also warns that that while it looks like obesity rates appear to be levelling out in the US,
their "analyses highlight troublesome trends in younger adults, in women, and in abdominal obesity
prevalence, as well as persistent racial/ethnic disparities."
In January 2014, Medical News Today reported how a study from Kansas State University
suggests less sitting and more
moving improves health and quality of life. The researchers showed people who do this have a
lower risk for chronic diseases, including heart disease, diabetes, stroke, breast cancer, colon
cancer and others.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
View all articles written by Catharine, or follow her on:
Courtesy: Medical News Today
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