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Discrimination Against Fat People
An examination of the oppression and discrimination against fat people - fat prejudice. -- 2,212 words; MLA

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A review of the Healthy People 2010 policy. -- 675 words;

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FAT PEOPLE

Obesity
Some of the world's top scientists have got together to try to reduce the growing number
of people who are dangerously fat. In Britain one in five women and one in seven men are
obese - and those figures are growing fast. But we are still behind the States where over
half the population are grossly overweight. Scientists from the University of Aberdeen,
Rowett Research Institute and Grampian University Hospitals NHS Trust have formed ACERO,
the Aberdeen Centre for Energy Regulation and Obesity.
The group will study the condition and related phenomena in the hope of coming up with a
solution. Professor of Zoology at Aberdeen University and founding chairman of ACERO,
John Speakman said: It is clear that the failure of some people to regulate their body
weight is not just a matter of people overeating or being lazy. It is also a problem with
their physiology which might have many causes. This new group of scientists collaborating
across institutional boundaries is set to make a significant impact on our understanding
of this problem, leading to breakthroughs which will aid in its treatment.
Professor Speakman said animal metabolisms could give a clue on how to tackle human
obesity. He said: Many small animals change body fatness in response to day length
changes. If we can find out why this happens, then we might be able to evaluate the sorts
of physiological problems that might underpin difficulties which obese people have in
regulating their body weight. One popular idea is the `thrifty genotype' hypothesis which
suggests the people who are prone to obesity have been favoured by natural selection in
the past because they are efficient in storing fat.
It is only when faced with a Western diet high in fat that the `thrifty genes' start to
cause problems because they are too efficient and lead to massive increases in body
weight. Obesity is associated with increases in Type II diabetes, high blood pressure,
cardiovascular disease and other disorders. As a result, it has considerable public
health significance as well as economic repercussions. In 1997 the World Health
Organisation officially declared obesity to be one of the most serious
health problems facing mankind.
Obesity is probably the oldest metabolic disturbance; an obese Stone Age statue has been
unearthed. Similar evidence of obesity is found in Egyptian mummies and in Greek
sculpture. People in a society become obese as soon as enough food and leisure are
available to cause an imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure. Sustained
caloric imbalance with consequent obesity is becoming the behavioral norm of the American
population. Forty million adult Americans weigh more than 20% above their desirable
weight. Its prevalence is increasing in all major race/sex groups including younger
adults age 25 to 44. 
This increase in the prevalence of obesity is against the trend in the last few decades
toward lower dietary fat and cholesterol intake, increased exercise, decreased cigarette
smoking and increased treatmenthypertension. Obesity is, therefore,
becoming a more important risk factor for the development of diabetes, hypertension and
cardiovascular disease. 
Obesity has multiple causes; the development of obesity is a complex interaction between
genetic, psychological,socioeconomic and cultural factors. Americans with less education
and income are, on the average, more obese. Individuals have unique genetic and
environmental factors which affect how food is processed; there are, therefore,
individual differencesin susceptibility to obesity. 
In the past, obesity has often been measured by desirable or relative weight. Life
insurance tables of desirable weight are based on weights associated with the lowest
mortality, among the insured population, who are predominantly upper middle class
Caucasian individuals. Relative weight is calculated by dividing the patient's weight by
a standard weight that is based on the patient's height, age and sex. There are several
problems with the appropriateness of these two measures. They are not applicable to the
entire population. They do not reflect current weight or mortality relationships in the
American population. Frame size is subjectively determined. They do not provide data
predicting the longevity of young persons weighed in their early 20s and followed until
their death. 
A newer, more clinically useful measure of overweight, is the so-called Body Mass Index
(BMI). The BMI is obtained by dividing the weight in kilograms by height measured in
meters, squared (W/H2). Identical standard values can be used for all adult patients,
both men and women. The lowest morbidity and mortality, for both sexes occur in persons
with a BMI of 22-25 kg/m2. Life insurance and other epidemiological studies have
suggested that mortality rates begin to increase substantially at
weights 20% greater than desirable, this corresponds to a BMI of 27 kg/m2. Individuals
with a BMI of 30 kg/m2 or greater clearly increased mortality. 
All of these indices are only measures of overweight.

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