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Dec 15, 2012

The world now has an obesity problem that is 25% of global deaths| via @SmartPlanet

It’s no longer just developed countries like the United States that are dealing with obesity. Now, overeating is more of a global problem than people not having enough to eat.

The U.N.’s Global Burden of Disease report — a five-year research effort of nearly 500 scientists in 50 countries — looked at the prevalence of disease and causes of death around the world in 1990 and compared it with health statistics in 2010 and noticed this trend, reported by New Scientist...Heart disease and stroke, which can be caused by being overweight, account for 25 percent of deaths worldwide. And, globally, it’s more likely that we will die from non-infectious diseases than infectious diseases like HIV or malaria. Overall we are living longer but “spending more of our lives living in poor health and with disability.”

The top 10 most burdensome global risk factors are: high blood pressure, smoking, alcohol use, household air pollution, low fruit intake, high body-mass index, high fasting plasma glucose, childhood underweight, particulate matter pollution, and physical inactivity (which wasn’t in the top 30 in 1990).

Overeating now bigger global problem than lack of food [New Scientist]

Please read full and follow at:
http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/bulletin/the-world-now-has-an-obesity-problem/8163