A CDC survey suggests America’s obesity rate may be falling.

Key Takeaways
  • Recent data shows a slight decline in US obesity rates, but experts caution it’s too early to declare a turning point in the obesity epidemic.
  • GLP-1 agonists show promise in combating obesity as trials demonstrate the drugs help people lose 10–20% of their body weight and reduce their risk of weight-related health problems.
  • However, the high cost and limited insurance coverage of GLP-1 agonists present significant barriers to widespread adoption, and other preventative initiatives would need to be adopted to keep obesity trends declining.
  • theonlytruescotsman@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    There’s at least two ads an hour for low cost ozempic and other inhibitors, and enough Americans are lazy and somehow rich enough to take it that it lowers the obesity rate. This doesn’t make anyone healthier.

  • Skeezix@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I visited there last year. Holy shit you guys are fucking fat.

    Nothing going on with inflation or the economy has stopped you guys from eating

    • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      You haven’t thought this comment through and it shows. Inflation raises the cost of healthy food and therefore healthy diet. Same with other economic factors. There’s whole avenues of study dedicated to this which is why so many other countries have banned certain food additives that are used in American food stuffs. Companies are literally poisoning Americans to make more profit and making the healthy stuff so expensive that the average consumer (lots of whom are already food insecure) can’t afford to buy healthy food so they buy what junk is available cheaply.

      I understand that you meant that the poor economy doesn’t seem to have stopped us from stuffing ourselves but like I said, you didn’t think your comment through.

  • whotookkarl@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Ozempic/GLP-1and fast food being way more expensive than it used to be, even if you give them your location and contacts by installing their app, are probably major factors.

  • Monkey With A Shell@lemmy.socdojo.com
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    7 days ago

    Fatty, fatty 2X4, can’t fit through the kitchen door…

    That and a similar gems used to be chanted at the big kids when I was young and being big was an abnormal state.

    I’ve mentioned before to my kids that it almost seems antiquated that a ‘quarter pounder’ used to be the big burger.

    I’m 6’3" and float around in the 230-240 space and try to stay no bigger than that. Back when the Simpsons first started that was considered comically obese. Now it’s just ‘dad bod’.

    So much of it is an overcorrection in the name of not hurting the feelings of fat people to the point where now not only have we stopped outwardly shaming them but we’ve started taking big/curvy as being natural and all-american.

      • Monkey With A Shell@lemmy.socdojo.com
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        7 days ago

        So did one of my daughters. It may not have been helpful in itself but think of t as a reflection of the prevailing attitudes. That being overweight is unhealthy and should be remedied. People go to great lengths today to justify and even glamorize being obese and it’s frustrating as can be.

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          I think the problem is that so much of our self-worth is wrapped up in being physically attractive. People want to feel desirable, and feeling ugly or unwanted is a killer on your self esteem. It also disproportionately affects women, as a man’s value isn’t necessarily tied to his physical beauty.

          If we treated obesity as a health problem, and not a beauty defect, then it would be like heart disease or eyesight. You have a daughter, so you’re probably old enough to remember when wearing glasses was considered ugly and unattractive. People would rather walk around unable to see than put on their spectacles, and contact lenses became a must-have fashion accessory.

          If not for the shared social trauma of fat-shaming, there would be no need for the overcorrection. People come in all shapes and sizes, and health is a relative term. Helping people get healthy is an act of medical care, not social control. It should be treated like any other condition, without judgement or stigma.

          • Monkey With A Shell@lemmy.socdojo.com
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            7 days ago

            I’m going to agree with most everything here, though guys have their own critiques to deal with. Short, bald, and pudgy or scrawny muscles take a fair bit of confidence to overcome. Some compensate in more or less healthy ways depending on their own persona.

            The way we deal with it as a society is a tougher question. Kids don’t deal in nuance so well so trying to frame it as a health thing is hard to do without perpetuating old stereotypes. Telling them that it’s wrong to bully someone but that being sedentary and out of shape is not good at the same time takes a lot of balancing. With the current culture of body positivity and health-at-every-size it can leave people scared to suggest that someone take up some sports or eat healthy for fear of being labeled as fat phobic.

            Somewhat ironic additional note, I just recently joined the ranks of the spectacled. Not delayed out of vanity but out of lack of need up until now, but yes I do remember the era of 4-eyes being a thing.

            • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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              7 days ago

              That’s fair, but short and bald are not health issues. And kids should be encouraged to exercise regardless of their size. A skinny kid who plays video games all day isn’t living a healthy lifestyle, either. Health at every size is about setting attainable standards. The overweight kids can’t climb the rope or fit into a bikini. As a society, we need to encourage healthy diet and exercise, not body shape and appearance. Kids understand that, because they haven’t learned to equate sex appeal and self-value yet. It’s the adults that have a hard time with it. That association is learned, and we’re all better off if we don’t learn it.