Obesity Spreads to Developing World, Bigger Killer Than Being Underweight

by Mike Smith · 2009-10-29 06:17:00 UTC
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Focusing on five health factors could prevents millions of premature deaths, extending global life expectancy by five years the World Health Organization explained this week. A report explains that poor childhood nutrition, unsafe sex, high blood pressure, alcohol, and bad sanitation and hygiene are responsible for 60 million premature deaths.

One of the most startling parts of the report explains that obesity and being overweight causes more deaths worldwide than being underweight. Even worse, though smoking and obesity is one of the main causes of premature deaths in the developed world, these problems are increasingly occurring in the developed world. Reuters report the morbid death statistics: "high blood pressure (responsible for 13 percent of deaths globally), tobacco use (9 percent), high blood glucose (6 percent), physical inactivity (6 percent), and obesity or being overweight (5 percent)."

The World Health Organization explain that the developing world is now experiencing a double burden — having to deal with poverty and under-nutrition, and increasingly facing simultaneous problems of obesity and high blood pressure. Had these issues been dealt with, life expectancy around the world would be a decade longer.

Photo credit: Nick J Webb

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