Trends in Obesity Since 1985

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During the past 20 years, there has been a dramatic increase of obesity in the United States that was reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), stating that the obesity trends in adulthood, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity. “ Obesity represents an immense public health threat to the welfare and prosperity of the nation. With one-third of its population overweight and another one-third obese” (Glassman, 2013). The main objective here is finding out how the CDC describes obesity trends since 1985 through today, defining what is obesity, and how the CDC measures the proportion of the state population in 2009 that were obese.

In the 1980's and 1990's obesity trends in the United States started with people cutting out low fat and high carbohydrate diets. A low fat, high carbohydrate diet consist of eliminating carbohydrate consumptions and replacing it with foods that have a higher percentage in fats and proteins to prevent from being obese. This trend was spread throughout the media and people started to go “carb crazy” and started losing a little bit of weight. Another trend over time was on how obesity affects some groups more than others. In adults, the CDC reported that “Non-Hispanic and Blacks had the highest age adjusted rates of obesity of 49.5 % compared to Mexicans Americans that has a 40.4 % , all Hispanics that has 39.1%, and Non-Hispanic whites that has a 34.3% age adjusted rate” (CDC, 2). Socioeconomic status is a cause that led people to being obesity. In 1988-1994 and 2007-2008 the obesity prevalence in adults increased in income and education levels. The CDC stated that, “Among men, obesity prevalence is generally similar at all income levels, however, among non-Hispanic black and ...

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...ne state had a prevalence less than 20%, and three states had prevalences of greater than 30%” (CDC, 951-53).

In conclusion, obesity is one of the problems that people face today. Now only is it costing American money but also it diminish people health when they are obese. Ford stated that, “ because obesity is a risk factor for many chronic conditions such as diabetes, this development has elicited a great deal of worry about the future of the national health (Ford,736). The CDC reported trends, which are race, socioeconomic status, and education that had increase obesity over the last 20 years in the United States. The CDC reports shows that obesity is increasing each year and no preventions has been made to decline this problem. From recent reports and based on state proportions in the United States, more than 20% of people in the state have obesity issues.

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