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Obesity
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The Dangers Of Childhood Obesity
In the year 2001 in the United States, the Surgeon General released a report outlining the crisis of obesity that the country had fallen into. The point of the report was to generate steps towards taking care of this health problem, which has reached epidemic proportions. The following year, the IOM (Institute of Medicine) was called upon to draw up a prevention plan to help decrease the rising numbers of obese and overweight children in the United States. The idea was to study the behavior and cultural and environmental factors that contribute to childhood obesity while trying to find ways of preventing this from occurring on such a large scale.
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Hereditary Factors In Childhood Obesity
How do we define obesity? In simple terms, it can be viewed as the excessive accumulation of body fat. When boys possess more than 25% fat in their total body weight, and girls possess more than 32%, then they are considered to be obese. Adults have a variety of medications they can rely on to combat obesity. These include Apidex and Phentermine. It’s a different story, however, for children.
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How Common Is Childhood Obesity?
In the United States today, it is estimated that one out of every five children is overweight. Since the 1960s, the rate of obesity in America has doubled. The problem with obesity is, while it is very easy to diagnose, it is incredibly difficult to treat. Among African Americans and Latino youth, the problem has more than doubled in recent years, while among white youth, it has risen fifty percent. This is cause for alarm. Not only is obesity unattractive and unhealthy, it can also be deadly. Nearly just as many die from obesity related illnesses as those who die from smoking. Obesity related deaths cost our society around $100 billion each year.
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Leading Causes Of Childhood Obesity
Increasingly, more and more people are dying each year from obesity related illnesses than from cigarette smoking. While tobacco still causes more avoidable deaths each year, the obesity statistics have been rising to a disturbing level. Officials claim that sedentary lifestyles combined with poor eating habits have been the cause of the nationwide obesity epidemic.
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Atkins Answer for Obesity Problem
Nowadays both men and women are so conscious about the way they look especially when it comes to their body figures. Obesity is one of the most serious problems that one can encounter. Being obese can make one person lessen their confidence.
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Can eGovernment Help the Obese eCitizen Lose Weight by Providing Proper Information?
In the United States of America we have a weight problem, obesity challenge and it is reaching epidemic or pandemic proportions, literally. What can the government do with their online web sites to get more information to citizens to help them eat better and exercise more? It seems that simple tips of eating healthier and ways to get people who are overweight to start working out a little make a lot of sense.
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An Obese Person Simply Eats Too Much
While it is often said that people who are obese have caused the problem themselves and that there is no excuse for letting yourself go to this extent, it might be a good idea to arm yourself with the facts about obesity before jumping to conclusions.
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Weight Loss One Step at a Time
It started happening right around I hit 30. Up until then I didn't have a weight problem at all. Actually, quite the opposite was true. Through my teens and 20s, no matter how much I ate or lifted weights in the gym, my body weight didn’t change very much. I desperately tried to build bulk to no avail.
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Stress and Weight Loss
We eat because we are stressed, angry, annoyed, stressed again, partying, and just to fit in. Probably the worst culprit is stress. Most of us suffer from relatively high levels of chronic stress from work, kids, partner, or the universe in general. These high levels of stress can lead to obesity. Here are a few top tips to keep the stress levels down.
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Stop The Nonsense--Put Blame Where It Belongs
The latest public service war is on childhood obesity. Obese children are the result, not the cause, of this problem. Time would be better spent looking for the reasons why this has happened. The child is not responsible for selecting or buying foods for the family dinner table. Who has taught the child what and how much to eat?
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