Southern States Remain Country's Fattest
Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee Have Highest Obesity Rates While Colorado Is The Slimmest
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(CBS/AP)
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More than 30 percent of adults in each of the states tipped the scales enough to ensure the South remains the nation's fattest region.
Colorado was the least obese, with about 19 percent fitting that category in a random telephone survey last year by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The 2007 findings are similar to results from the same survey the three previous years. Mississippi has had the highest obesity rate every year since 2004. But Alabama, Tennessee, West Virginia and Louisiana have also clustered near the top of the list, often so close that the difference between their rates and Mississippi's may not be statistically significant.
Why is the South so heavy? The traditional Southern diet - high in fat and fried food - may be part of the answer, said Dr. William Dietz, who heads CDC's nutrition, physical activity and obesity division.
The South also has a large concentration of rural residents and black women - two groups that tend to have higher obesity rates, he said.
Colorado, meanwhile, is a state with a reputation for exercise. It has plentiful biking and hiking trails, and an elevation that causes the body to labor a bit more, Dietz said.
Obesity is based on the body mass index, a calculation using height and weight. A 5-foot, 9-inch adult who weighs 203 pounds would have a BMI of 30, which is considered the threshold for obesity.
CDC officials believe the telephone survey of 350,000 adults offers conservative estimates of obesity rates, because it's based on what respondents said about their height and weight. Men commonly overstate their height and women often lowball their weight, health experts say.
"The heavier you are, the more you underestimate your weight, probably because you don't weigh yourself as often," Dietz said.
Overall, about 26 percent of the respondents were obese, according to the study, published this week in CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
A different CDC survey - a gold-standard project in which researchers actually weigh and measure survey respondents - put the adult obesity rate at 34 percent in 2005 and 2006, the most recent years for which there are data.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 57 CommentsYou would think the sight of themselves in the mirror would make them take off the feed bag but it doesn''t. They just keep getting bigger. And of course they''re the ones that like to wear shorts to show off their flab & cellulite. You don''t want them sitting next to you on the airplane.
I hear some men are "chubby chasers." Not me. You can have the fatties.
Why don''t you go jogging or just worry about yourself?
Who watches you?
Cleveland, Flint or any of the "rust belt". We were ok with you folks "coming on down" but you might push back from the table a little bit............
The waters aren''t rising- Florida is sinking from the weight..........
do you think the callers reached the active folks out jogging, riding bikes and playing ball or maybe the couch ''taters sitting by the phone.
Cleveland, Flint or any of the "rust belt". We were ok with you folks "coming on down" but you might push back from the table a little bit............
The waters aren''t rising- Florida is sinking from the weight..........
Cleveland, Flint or any of the "rust belt". We were ok with you folks "coming on down" but you might push back from the table a little bit............
The waters aren''t rising- Florida is sinking from the weight..........
noseonsurface: i don''t know that it is about having "the perfect body" (which most of us, including me, don''t have the gumption to pursue) as much as it is about being relatively fit.
The next survey will concern the number suffering from MS, Cancer, Diabetes, Parkinson''s, Dead Liver and anything else you can think of.
Then we have Genetically Modified Corn, Wheat, Rape Seed and Tomatoes to consider. Not sure whether it is Mass Suicide or Population Control, take your pick.
Whatever the answer, Big Pharma, Big Chemical and the Undertakers are having a field day.
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Posted by SistaTee at 10:57 PM : Jul 17, 2008
Well, yeh, it''s the grits......and sausage, bisquits, gravy, country ham, hash browns....and ohhhh the cobblers.....blackberry is my favorite.....and what the hell is wrong with being fat........oh......cause we live in an imaginary slim world where everybody has the "perfect" body......only on tv and the movies dorks......ain''t happening in real life. So stoke up on the southern grub while you can....
And that''s just breakfast.
Well, at 5,000+ feet, if you were obese... you''d get winded just getting out of bed at that altitude!
Posted by kansas1946 at 07:01 PM : Jul 17, 2008
Uh....duh you idiot, because the dems would tax the people into starvation!!! Go to bed!
Posted by ubrew12 at 11:45 PM : Jul 17, 2008
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My response:
I lived in the south for over a year.
Based on what I observed, your description is pretty accurate! Are you sure you haven''t lived in the south at some time!?
But, I also want to say, I met some very nice people there! And, I want to make that clear, too!
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