Obesity and Weight Loss

It has been said that the current generation is the first in our history where the parents have a good chance to outlive their children.  I am not sure that I completely agree, but the statistics below from the Centers for Disease Control make a strong argument.  In our clinic we look to find the underlying metabolic causes that stand in the way of a fit and healthy body.  We can help determine the underlying cause of an individual’s struggles with their weight and help the body regain its natural balance.  There is a scientific, step-by-step approach to solve this problem in your life!
-Dr. Gatcha 

Information from the CDC website 
 

Fact: Obesity rates are soaring in the U.S.

• Between 1980 and 2000, obesity rates doubled among adults. About 60million adults, or 30% of the adult population, are now obese.

• Similarly since 1980, overweight rates have doubled among children and tripled among adolescents – increasing the number of years they are exposed to the health risks of obesity.

Fact: Obesity is already having an adverse impact on young people

• Type 2 diabetes – once believed to affect only adults – is now being diagnosed among young people.

• In some communities almost half of the pediatric diabetes cases are type 2, when in the past the total was close to zero. Although childhood-onset Type 2 diabetes is still a rare condition, overweight children with this disease are at risk of suffering the serious complications of diabetes as adults, such as kidney disease, blindness, and amputations.

• Sixty-one percent of overweight 5- to10-year-olds already have at least one risk factor for heart disease, and 26% have two or more risk factors.

Fact: Most people still do not practice healthy behaviors that can prevent obesity The primary behaviors causing the obesity epidemic are well known and preventable: physical inactivity and unhealthy diet.
Despite this knowledge:

• Only about 25% of U.S. adults eat the recommended five or more servings of fruits and vegetables each day.

• Less than 25% of adolescents eat the recommended five or more servings of fruits and vegetables each day.

• More than 50% of American adults do not get the recommended amount of physical activity to provide health benefits.

• More than a third of young people in grades 9–12 do not regularly engage in vigorous physical activity.

Fact: Obesity-related costs place a huge burden on the U.S. economy.

Direct health costs attributable to obesity have been estimated at $52 billion in

1995 and $75 billion in 2003.

Among children and adolescents, annual hospital costs related to overweight and obesity more than tripled over the past two decades – rising to $127 million during 1997–1999 (in 2001 constant U.S. dollars), up from $35 million during 1979–1981.

Among adults in 1996, one study found that $31 billion of the treatment costs
(in year 2000 dollars) for cardiovascular disease – 17% of direct medical costs – were related to overweight and obesity.

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