Hi all,
The March 2009 issue of Popular Science has some interesting statistics about obesity. Take it with the grain of salt you would give any stats from popular media, but I thought they shed some light on why it can be such a challenge to NOT be obese in our culture---especially for those of us who are maintaining a loss.
First (for fun!) the top 8 countries based on % of population for obesity:
1) Nauru 79%
2) Tonga 56%
3) French Polynesia 41%
4) Saudi Arabia 36%
5) UAE & USA tie at 34%
7) Bahrain & Kuwait tie at 29%
Now for overweight:
1) French Polynesia 74% overweight
2) Saudi Arabia 73%
3) UK & Northern Ireland 67%, tied with Germany 67%
5) Kuwait 64%
6) USA 66%
7) Bosnia & Herzegovina 63%
8) Israel 62%
So the USA is a culture in which obesity is easily facilitated. (The only state with a < 20% obesity rate is Colorado.)
The USDA recommends 2000 calories a day (yeah, yeah, I know!), but it is interesting to compare that recommendation with what some authorities think is actually being consumed.
The USDA estimates the average American consumes 2200 calories a day. The WHO estimates the average American consumes 3766 calories a day, and that 1462 of those are from fats, oils & sugar.
They have a blurb on kids' "happy" meals. The suggestion for average calories per meal for kids according to this magazine (I know, I know) is 430 calories. They list the percentage of fast food kids meals that exceed this 430 calorie/meal recommendation:
Taco Bell 100%
KFC 100%
McDonald's 93%
Wendy's 93%
Burger King 92%
Subway 33%
They have a great map that shows the obesity/overweight percentages for each state, as well as estimates for $$ spent annually on health care for obesity related illnesses, people diagnosed with heart disease, lack of access to health insurance, and people diagnosed with diabetes. A cursory overview appears to demonstrate that the states with the hightest number of obese people (Alabama, Mississippi, & Tennessee) also have the highest percentage of diabetes diagnoses rates, and about 14.7-19.3 % of the populations of those states lack access to health care.
It's a pretty trippy thing when I sit and think that 34% of American adults are obese.
So all of this pondering helps me redouble my effort to stick to plan. I think here in Maintainers, we try really hard to not be part of the statistics of formerly obese and overweight people who gain it back.
Have a great day!