Associated Press/Mark Lennihan - In this June 26, 2012, photo, two overweight women hold a conversation in New York. A new poll suggests that while more than 7 in 10 Americans can correctly tick off heart disease
Heart disease and diabetes get all the attention, but what about the many other ways obesity can damage your health? Carrying too many pounds may lead to or worsen some types of cancer, arthritis, sleep apnea, even infertility. But a new poll suggests few Americans realize the links. Only about one-quarter of people think it's possible for someone to be very overweight and still healthy, according to the poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Ask about the most serious consequences, and more than 7 in 10 Americans
can correctly tick off heart disease and diabetes. Heart disease is the
nation's leading killer, and diabetes and obesity are twin epidemics, as rates
of both have climbed in recent years. The other consequences aren't so well
known. "People are often shocked to hear how far-reaching the effects of
obesity are," said Jennifer Dimitriou, a bariatric dietitian at New York's
Montefiore Medical Center.
Only 7 percent of people surveyed mentioned cancer, although doctors
long have known that fat increases the risk of developing cancers of the colon,
breast, prostate, uterus and certain other sites. Plus, being overweight can
make it harder to spot tumors early and to treat them. Then there's the toll on
your joints, especially the knees. About 15 percent of people knew obesity can
contribute to arthritis, a vicious cycle as the joint pain then makes it harder
to exercise and shed pounds.
High blood pressure, high cholesterol and strokes were fairly low on the
list. Infertility didn't get a mention. Also, 5 percent put respiratory
problems on the list. Studies show people who are overweight are at increased
risk of sleep apnea and asthma, and that dropping pounds can help improve their
symptoms.
Knowing more about the myriad ways obesity affects health could help
motivate people to get more active and eat better before full-blown disease
strikes, Dimitriou said. "Most people want to become healthier. It's the
know-how, and understanding what the consequences are," she said. But only
52 percent of those surveyed said they've discussed the health risks of being
overweight with a doctor.
In another complication, the AP-NORC Center survey found that about half
of people think their weight is just about right, and only 12 percent of
parents think their child is overweight. That's even though government figures
show two-thirds of U.S. adults, and one-third of children and teens, are either
overweight or obese. If you're surrounded by overweight people, especially in
your family, "then that's all you know, and that to you is normal,"
Dimitriou said. The AP-NORC Center survey was conducted Nov. 21 through Dec.
14. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,011 adults nationwide
and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points.
Source: Yahoo News
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