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More than four in 10 adults are obese in Kentucky and West Virginia as rates soared across the US, new official data shows.
Nineteen states now have obesity rates above 35 per cent — considered an alarming threshold by officials — which is double the number in 2018.
The figures, released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), prompted experts to describe the situation as an ‘urgent epidemic’.
Just one of the US’ 54 states and territories — Washington D.C. — has an obesity rate of lower than 25 per cent now, compared to three in 2018.
CDC acting principal deputy director Debra Houry said the new data ‘illustrates the urgent need for making obesity prevention and treatment accessible to all Americans in every state and every community’.
President Joe Biden last week announced his plan for the biggest crackdown on waistlines in 50 years, which includes mandatory nutrition labelling on the front of food products to highlight snacks too fatty, sugary or salty.
And the criteria for food-makers to market their products as ‘healthy’ will also become stricter under the new plans.
According to the National Institutes of Health, obesity is the second leading cause of preventable death in the US, behind cigarette smoking. Around 280,000 Americans die directly due to obesity every year.
Karen Hacker, director of CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, said access to healthy foods, physical activity and obesity treatment programs can ‘help slow and ultimately reverse the obesity epidemic.’
West Virginia, one of the nation’s poorest states, has an obesity rate of 40.6 per cent. It was followed by neighbouring Kentucky (40.3 per cent).
California, Washington, Colorado, New York and Vermont were among the states with the lowest levels of obesity in the country.
In 2018, there were eight states with obesity rates over 35 per cent, and by 2020 it had doubled to 16. Black Americans are most likely to be obese, followed by Hispanic and then white people, according to the latest data.
Men are more likely to be obese than women, and so are less educated people.
The relationship between obesity and money is complex, as people in the middle tier of income are more likely to be obese than the highest and lowest earners.
The CDC figures are based on self-reported height and weight data from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system. There was insufficient data to determine a rate for Florida, the CDC said.
But the Florida Department of Health reports 36 per cent of the state’s adults are medically too fat, which means it would join the nineteen states with high obesity rates.
Obesity is defined as an adult having a BMI of 30 or over.
A healthy person’s BMI – calculated by dividing weight in kg by height in meters, and the answer by the height again – is between 18.5 and 24.9.
The condition costs the US healthcare system around $173billion a year, due to obesity increasing a person’s risk of a number of life-threatening conditions.
Such conditions include type 2 diabetes, which can cause kidney disease, blindness and even limb amputations.
Obesity also raises the risk of heart disease, which kills 647,000 people every year in the US – making it the number one cause of death.
Carrying dangerous amounts of weight has also been linked to strokes, severe outcomes from Covid, poor mental health, and 12 different cancers.
This includes breast, which affects one in eight women at some point in their lives.
People with obesity also describe being stigmatized due to their weight.
Among children, research suggests that 70 per cent of obese youngsters have high blood pressure or raised cholesterol, which puts them at risk of heart disease.
Obese children are also significantly more likely to become obese adults. And if children are overweight, their obesity in adulthood is often more severe.
As many as one in five children start school in the US being overweight or obese.