| Obesity in America |
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| Written by Russell Frazier |
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America has a big fat problem, and it’s time to deal with it. Did you know that a whopping 67% of all Americans, age 20 and over, are “overweight” or “obese” as defined by the National Institutes of Health? Additionally, one out of every 3 adults, more than ever before, now fall into the “obese” category. Some experts say this number could balloon to 40 percent by 2018. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) the medical costs alone for treating obesity have essentially doubled since 1998 to $147 billion and now account for 9.1% of all medical costs in the US. It’s not completely our fault. Although experts agree that lifestyle and eating choices play a significant role in the accumulation of fat, recent research reveals that some of the problem is inherited or “programmed” into our systems during childhood and adolescence. A 2007 study by Kirsty Spalding, PhD, of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, together with a large team of international researchers, found that the number of fat cells (adipocytes) in the human body are set during childhood and adolescence. It was discovered that obese children add fat cells at twice the rate as their lean peers, so they start adulthood with an increased number of fat cells in their body.
After individuals reach adulthood the number of fat cells stays relatively constant, neither increasing nor decreasing. As adults then gain weight, it is because the fat cells swell up with more and more lipids or stored energy. Additionally, a person with excess fat may become partially resistant to the hormone leptin, which is one of the body’s main hunger regulating hormones, so it takes more food for the person to feel satisfied. When an obese person loses weight, they are decreasing the volume of fats within each fat cell, while the number of cells remains the same. A long-term solution requires a “reset” to both the desire for high-calorie foods and the desire for high volumes of food. It should come as no surprise that, according to a recent Gallup poll, over 55 percent of Americans would like to lose weight. However, less than half of those who want to lose weight are currently trying. Perhaps, they are not trying because they have been let down by so many other diet programs that allow them to lose a few pounds only to gain it back. Or perhaps it’s because it usually takes so long to lose the amount of weight they need to lose. The Clinical HCG Weight Loss Program offers what many consider the best long-term solution, as it changes the eating habits by changing the desire for the types and volumes of food. Observations suggest that it may also reset the brain and body chemistry necessary to support a sustained slimmer body. And our program offers an easy lifetime maintenance plan to keep your body in check. Fast Facts Concerning Obesity
This article used with permission from the Author - © Russell Frazier |





