By now, obesity is recognized as the world pandemic that it is: a disease that is not merely a question of excess weight, but of a long string of co-morbidities—diabetes, hypertension, obstructive sleep apnea, hyperlipidemia, stroke, several types of cancer and the list goes on. Obesity not only impairs quality of life, but duration of life. The morbidly obese female gives up about nine years of life expectancy, and the morbidly obese male about 12. Our children's generation may be the first in a century to witness a decrease in lifespan, because of rising obesity rates.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, one-third of the adults in the US—more than 72 million people--are obese. Obesity rates have not only doubled in adults, since 1980, but have tripled in those aged 6 to 19. The prevalence of obesity in this young group portends a dire future for health care
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