Severe obesity is rising in the US, according to new research
The rate of severe obesity is about 40 per cent in the US, with women at particularly high risk of severe obesity, the study found.
Obesity is high and holding steady in the US, but the proportion of those with severe obesity – especially women – has climbed in the past decade, according to new research from the US government.
The US obesity rate is about 40 per cent, according to a 2021-2023 survey of about 6,000 people. Nearly one in 10 of those surveyed reported severe obesity, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found.
Women were nearly twice as likely as men to report severe obesity, a chronic disease linked to a host of health problems.
The overall obesity rate appeared to tick down compared with the 2017-2020 survey, but the change wasn’t considered statistically significant. The numbers are small enough that there’s a mathematical chance they didn’t truly decline.
That means it’s too soon to know whether new treatments for obesity, including blockbuster weight-loss drugs such as Wegovy, Ozempic, and Zepbound, can help ease the epidemic, according to Dr Samuel Emmerich, the CDC public health officer who led the latest study.
“We simply can’t see down to that detailed level to prescription medication use and compare that to changes in obesity prevalence,” Emmerich said.
“Hopefully that is something we can see in the future”.
Most telling though, the results show that the overall obesity rate in the US has not changed significantly in a decade, even as the rate of severe obesity climbed from nearly 8 per cent in the 2013-2014 survey to nearly 10 per cent in the most recent one.
Before that, obesity had increased rapidly in the US since the 1990s, federal surveys showed.
Measures of obesity and severe obesity are determined according to body mass index, a calculation based on height and weight. People with a BMI of 30 are considered to have obesity, and those with a BMI of 40 or higher have severe obesity.
BMI is regarded as a flawed tool but remains widely used by doctors to screen for obesity.
Not clear why severe obesity rates are going up
“Seeing increases in severe obesity is even more alarming because that’s the level of obesity that’s most highly associated with some of the highest levels of cardiovascular disease and diabetes and lower quality of life,” said Solveig Cunningham, an Emory University global health professor who specialises in obesity.
Cunningham, who was not involved in the new study, said it’s not clear why rates of severe obesity are going up, or why they were higher among women.
Factors could include the effects of hormones, the impact of childbearing or other causes that require further study, she said.
The new study also found that obesity rates varied by education. Almost 32 per cent of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher reported having obesity, compared with about 45 per cent of those with some college or a high school diploma or less.
The new report follows the release earlier this month of data from US states and territories that showed that in 2023, the rate of obesity ranged widely by place, from a high of more than 41 per cent of adults in West Virginia to a low of less than 24 per cent of adults in Washington, DC.
Rates were highest in the Midwest and the South, but all US states and territories reported obesity rates higher than 20 per cent. In 23 states, more than one in three adults had obesity, the data showed.
Before 2013, no state had a rate that high, said Dr Alyson Goodman, who leads a CDC team focused on population health.
The increasing prevalence of obesity in the US can be “really discouraging,” Goodman said.
But, she added, recent emphasis on understanding obesity as a metabolic disease and new interventions, such as the new class of weight-loss drugs, gives her hope.
The key is preventing obesity in the first place, starting in early childhood, Cunningham said. But even when people develop obesity, preventing additional weight gain should be the goal.
“It’s really hard to get obesity to reverse at the individual level and at the population level,” Cunningham said. “I guess it’s not surprising that we’re not seeing downward shifts in the prevalence of obesity”.
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