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HEALTH CONSEQUENCES OF OBESITY
Some of the possible health problems stemming from obesity include
type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, high blood triglycerides, high blood
pressure and stroke. Obesity also raises your risk of certain types of cancer.
Obese men are more likely than normal-weight peers to die from cancer of the
colon, rectum and prostate. Obese women are more likely than non-obese women to
die from cancer of the gallbladder, breast, uterus, cervix and ovaries. Death
from some cancers may be more likely because obesity makes the cancers harder to
detect in the early stages (for example, the initial small lump of breast cancer
may not be felt in an obese woman). Recent studies show obesity increases the
risk of Alzheimer's-type dementia.
Other disease and health problems linked to obesity
include:
- Gallbladder disease and gallstones
- Osteoarthritis, back, hip and knee joints
deteriorate, partly a result of excess weight on the joints
- Gout, or joint pain, caused by deposits of uric
acid crystals in the joint space; most often experienced as arthritis in one
joint
- Sleep apnea, a disorder characterized by loud
snoring and multiple short periods when breathing stops during sleep
- Psychological and social problems
According to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and
Kidney Diseases, if you are 40 percent overweight, you are twice as likely to
die prematurely as an average-weight person. The more obese a person is, the
more likely he or she is to have health problems.
Emotional aspects of obesity
One of the most painful aspects of obesity may be the emotional
suffering. People often equate attractiveness with thinness, especially in
women. This message, intended or not, makes many overweight people feel
unattractive. Many people assume that obese people are gluttonous, lazy or both.
However, more and more evidence contradicts this
assumption.
Obese people may face prejudice or discrimination at work, at school,
while job hunting and in social situations. Feelings of rejection, shame or
depression are common. Founded in 1969, the National Association to Advance Fat
Acceptance has been striving to eliminate discrimination based on body size and
to provide fat people with the tools for self-empowerment through public
education, advocacy and member support.
For more information please ask your physician on
your next visit.
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