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BlackChampagne -- no longer new; improvement also in question.: Number of Morbidly Obese, Hostess Stock, Soar



Wednesday, April 11, 2007  

Number of Morbidly Obese, Hostess Stock, Soar


Depressing news item from Yahoo today.
WASHINGTON (AFP) - The number of morbidly obese Americans, those who weigh 100 pounds (45 kilograms) over normal weight, is rising much faster than the rest of the obese population, said a study released Tuesday.

The number of severely obese people rose 50 percent from 2000 to 2005, reaching three percent of the US population, or 6.8 million adults, according to a study by the Rand Corporation.

That rise was twice as fast as the gains registered in the moderate obesity, it said.

In order to be considered morbidly obese, a five-foot-ten-inch (1.77 meter) man would have to weigh 300 pounds (136 kilograms) or more, and a five-foot-four-inch (1.64 meter) woman would weigh 250 pounds (113 kilograms) or more.
You have to tip 40 BMI to qualify, while 30 is just "overweight." Calculate yours here if you wanna, but, as they always say, include logic with your check. If you're one of the miniscule fraction of humans with significant added body musculature you'll obviously weight more than average for your height, and will creep up the BMI scale, but you're obviously not overweight or obese in the way this sort of simple calculator means. (I'm right at the upper edge of "normal weight," but I wear the same size pants I did in high school, when I weighed about 140 and couldn't put on a pound to save my life, and a look in the mirrror is enough to tell me most of the 25-30 I've put on since then is due to lifting heavy things.)

It can be kind of petty/gloating to poke news items about people who are just overweight or obese (the majority of Americans at this point) but this morbidly obese setting is both tragic and dangerous. This article doesn't go into it, but I think I've read that this level of porkitude is more dangerous than being a smoker, in terms of added health risks. (Though plenty of people manage both.) High blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack, stroke, circulatory problems, etc. And jokes about Hostess aside, you need to eat a lot more than dessert snacks to double your ideal weight, and no one's doing that with salads and vegetables and fresh fruit. Fried chicken, steak, biscuits, gravy, french fries... damn, now I'm hungry.

Anyway, this kind of disregard for your body's health takes a decade or more off of your life, causes constant illnesses and depression, and it's expensive! I blogged about it a couple of years, back when this blog was worth reading, ago after a Vegas vacation (scroll down to the 3rd Dec 29th update), where we were around a woman who was borderline morbidly obese at the time, and in a week we never left a store without her buying a snack; M&Ms, soda, muffin, giant 800 calorie Starbucks coffee, etc. I figured she was spending $10 a day on that garbage, this was on vacation, when she didn't have her own pantry or a car to indulge in independent midnight snack runs. I hate myself when I give into late night urges for corn chips, or peanut butter pretzel bites, or an extra Dr. Pepper, when I could/should have just had an apple. Imagine how unhappy people are when they do that every day, several times a day, and see the results steadily mounting on their waistline?

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Comments:

that whole inertia thing that mass attracts mass. the question is what kind of mass do you want to accumulate. and whether mass converts to energy. sure there's a evolution disposition to store fat, but that was assuming there would be enough times for it to turn into energy. so not surprising that the extreme ends acquire mass so much faster.


 

That, and cheeseburgers are like, really tasty...


 

I've always had a problem with the BMI calculation. Taking into account only height and weight to calculate whether or not you are "normal," "overweight," or "obese," disregards other variables such as body musculature(which you mentioned), as well as bone structure.

According to BMI I am an obese person. Being a male at 6'4" and 265lbs puts me at 32.3BMI. Now I'll be the first to admit that I'm not ready to run a marathon, but I would hardly classify myself as overwieght, let alone obese.

When I enquired at my doctor's office (just last week actually) about Body Mass Index, they confirmed my concerns and told me that it wasn't a reliable tool in a lot cases. After perfoming a different test, involving wierd looking pinching instruments and about 20 minutes, my doctor informed my that I was only slightly above average in body fat, at around 24. Which, if we were using the BMI chart, would put my weight at 197lbs, a 68lb difference from my current weight.

I don't have much clue as to why I wrote this diatribe, I've been reading your blog for about 3years now, since you first started your decahedron DiabloII lists, and have never been compelled to post a comment or reply before. I know that a large portion of Americans, as well as Canadians, are becoming more and more obese; but I think that a generalized tool such as the BMI chart is not what we should be using to measure one's health.

And for the record, my doctor agrees with me, and said I am of a healthy weight, and that if I were to lose 68lbs and comform to what BMI says is right for my height, I'd be in danger of developing severe health problems.


 

I can say one thing about obesity: it is a pretty sneaky little specter. In high school, I gained 50lbs without even being aware of it. No severe emotional emptiness that I was filling with food or anything like that, either. I just went about my day-to-day and enjoyed life. Granted, I have a fairly large frame (I was constantly pestered to be on the football teams of the few different high schools I attended), but the weight I put on was clearly visible...I just didn't see it.

It warrants mentioning that even at my fattest I was "only" 270lbs (I've since lost it and then some). The point is that it happens before people realize it, and many lack the company to tell them that their ass has developed a gravitational field. By the time it's severe enough to be noticed by the party in question, it is far too late to casually reverse the damage...extreme lifestyle changes are required, and that isn't something we Americans are very good at ;). It's a sad state of affairs, but the individual has only him/herself to blame in the end.


 

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