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  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    5:29pm, EDT

    Which are America's fattest cities?

    By Michelle Fox
    CNBC.com

    More than one-third of American adults are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The obesity epidemic has been going on for decades, and today health-care costs associated with obesity are estimated at $147 billion a year.

    To be considered obese, a person has a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher. With the extra weight comes myriad health issues — obesity contributes to heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and some cancers.

    Recently, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index ranked the 10 most obese metropolitan areas in the U.S., offering perspective on the cities that are affected by the country’s obesity woes.

    The health implications are apparent — of the metro areas with the highest obesity levels, 58 percent of their residents were more likely to report having had a heart attack over the course of their lifetimes, and 34 percent were more likely to report having high blood pressure.  Combined, residents of these cities also pay an estimated $1 billion more in medical costs each year thanks to their high obesity rates.

    In 2010, the government announced its goal to lower the prevalence of obesity to 15 percent. In 2011, only three out of the 190 areas surveyed in the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index had an obesity rate below that level: Fort-Collins-Loveland, Colo.; Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn.; and Boulder, Colo. Boulder ranked as the least obese city, with an obesity rate of 12.1 percent.

    It’s not all bad news, however. According to the CDC, although there was a rise in obesity between 1983 and 2000, the rates actually have stabilized over the past 10 years.

    “There has been no change in obesity prevalence in recent years,” CDC scientist Heidi Blanck said. “However, over the last decade there has been a significant increase in obesity prevalence among men and boys, but not among women and girls overall.”

    The government is aiming to eventually reduce the rate of obesity. In 2010, the Childhood Obesity Task Force released 70 recommendations to prevent and control childhood obesity.

    Look ahead to see the most obese metro areas in the U.S., and how much their citizens are paying in obesity-related health-care costs every year, according to the recent Gallup survey.

    10. Reading, Pennsylvania

    Obesity rate: 32.7 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $190.2 million

    Located approximately 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia, Reading, Pa., ranks 10th on the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. It’s the most obese city in Pennsylvania, which has a statewide obesity rate of 28.6 percent, according to the CDC .

    With 88,000 people residing in the city, more than 28,000 residents are considered obese. In Reading, 10 percent report having diabetes, a chronic disease associated with obesity. Even higher than the obesity rate is the poverty rate: 35 percent of the population in the city lives below the poverty level. According to the nonprofit Food Research and Action Center, women and children in poverty are at the highest risk for obesity.

    9. Kennewick-Pasco-Richland, Washington

    Obesity rate: 33.2 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $116.5 million

    This metropolitan area in southeastern Washington is called Tri-Cities. It’s also known as “The Heart of Washington Wine Country,” with more than 160 wineries. However, according to Gallup, the region has one of the highest obesity rates in the country — at 33.2 percent — which shows an increase from the 31.5 percent obesity rate a CDC survey found for the area in 2010.

    8. Topeka, Kansas

    Obesity rate: 33.3 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $109.8 million

    More than 42,000 of the 127,473 residents of Topeka, Kan., suffer from obesity, according to data from Gallup. The good news is the city’s situation appears to be improving: Topeka had an obesity rate of 36 percent in 2010, almost three percentage points above where it is today, according to the CDC survey.

    Topeka, the capital of Kansas, was also named as one of the 10 best cities for the next decade by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine in 2010.

    7. Lakeland-Winter Haven, Florida

    Obesity rate: 33.5 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $279.3 million

    According to Gallup, the Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla., metro area has the potential to save more than $154 million in health-care costs if its obesity rate dropped to 15 percent. Instead, 33.5 percent of its residents suffer from obesity, racking up more than $279 million a year in medical bills.

    The metropolitan area, which includes the cities of Lakeland and Winter Haven, has more than 75 lakes and is located in central Florida between Orlando and Tampa. In 2010, 37.9 percent of its residents were obese, according to the CDC study.

    6. Charleston, West Virginia

    Obesity rate: 33.8 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $146.9 million

    Charleston is the capital of West Virginia and is dubbed the cultural, recreational and business capital of the Appalachian Mountains. It’s home to several golf courses and parks, including the Haddad Riverfront Park along the Kanawha River.

    There are more than 51,000 people living in the city, as of the 2010 census, and based on the rates from Gallup approximately 17,000 of them are obese. In addition, about 17 percent of the population has also reported having diabetes.

    The Gallup-Healthways’ number is up from the CDC survey’s obesity rate of 32.3 percent for the city in 2010. According to the CDC, the state of West Virginia had a 32.5 percent obesity rate in 2010, placing Charleston higher than the state average.

    5. Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas

    Obesity rate: 33.8 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $182.8 million

    Located in southeast Texas, this metro area includes the cities of Beaumont and Port Arthur. Oil is big business for the region, with refineries throughout the area. The metro area has been a major player in the oil industry ever since the Lucas Gusher exploded on Spindletop Hill in 1901.

    According to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, the metro area could potentially save $101.6 million in medical costs if its obesity rate dropped to 15 percent, instead of the almost 34 percent it has now. Beaumont-Port Arthur is the second most obese metro area in Texas, which has a statewide obesity rate of 31 percent.

    4. Rockford, Illinois

    Obesity rate: 35.5 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $179.4 million

    Located in northern Illinois, Rockford calls itself the “City of Gardens” because of the 7,000 acres of parks, trails, tree-lined streets and public gardens within its borders. That’s not the only nickname the city has had — it has also been called “Forest City,” because of its woods and was once known as the “Screw Capital of the World” due to factories that produced screws and bolts. Manufacturing is still the area’s biggest industry.

    Rockford also ranks as the fourth fattest city in the country, however, with an obesity rate of 35.5 percent. Of the more than 152,000 people who live in Rockford, nearly 54,000 are considered obese, while 10 percent have diabetes and 23 percent live below the poverty line.

    3. Huntington-Ashland, West Virginia-Kentucky-Ohio

    Obesity rate: 36 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $146.9 million

    The Huntington-Ashland metropolitan area encompasses three states — West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio — at the point where they all meet by the Ohio River.

    The metro area first gained national attention in 2008 after an Associated Press story called it the nation’s unhealthiest. That led Jami Oliver to bring his ABC reality show, “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” into Huntington, W.Va., to give schools and the town a nutrition make-over. Oliver has called his time there a success. However, the larger metro area still appears to be struggling — 36 percent of its citizens are obese, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, and nearly 20 percent suffer from diabetes.

    2. Binghamton, New York

    Obesity rate: 37.6 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs $131.5 million

    In the city of Binghamton, more than 17,000 residents are obese, according to rates from the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. It's surprising then that 54 percent of respondents also said they exercise frequently.

    Located at the junction of the Susquehanna and Chenango rivers in southern New York, Binghamton has the highest obesity rate in the state, compared to New York State’s rate of just below 24 percent. Meanwhile, 27.8 percent of Binghamton’s population lives below the poverty level.

    1. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas

    Obesity rate: 38.8 percent

    Annual obesity-related costs: $410.9 million

    Located near the Mexican border in southern Texas, this metro area is the most obese in the nation, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. If the region dropped the rate from 38.8 percent to 15 percent, it could potentially save a whopping $252 million a year in medical costs annually. That’s a big savings, especially considering 50 percent of residents report being uninsured.

    In 2010, 33.3 percent of the McAllen-Edinburg-Mission metropolitan area’s population was obese, according to a CDC survey, so the data suggest that the country’s most obese city is also getting worse, bucking the nationwide trend of stabilization in obesity rates.

    See the full list: America's fattest cities

     “Fat & Fatter” premieres Thursday, March 29 at 9 p.m. ET, with a re-air Sunday, April 1 at 10 pm ET.

    The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index results are based on telephone interviews throughout 2011, with a random sampling of 353,492 adults living in the U.S. Health-care costs were based on the National Institute of Health’s estimate of $1,429 per person, per year, in additional health-care costs for people considered obese, compared to those of non-obese individuals.

    Related links from CNBC:

    Where the 1% live

    Best places to live

    Top turnaround towns

     

    586 comments

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  • 7
    Mar
    2012
    12:51pm, EST

    America's fattest -- and skinniest -- cities revealed

    By Jeanna Bryner
    LiveScience

    Our nation's cities appear to be fat, according to a new Gallup-Healthways poll, which found that at least 15 percent of residents in 187 of the 190 metro areas surveyed are obese.

    Boulder, Colo., came out on top as the skinniest city, with just 12.1 percent of residents considered obese, while the number of obese in the fattest metro area, McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas, soared to 38.8 percent. The state of Colorado snagged the top spot as the skinniest state in Gallup's 2011 survey of U.S. states.

    The only three metro areas with obesity rates at or below 15 percent were Boulder,  Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn., and Fort Collins-Loveland, Colo. These would be the only cities meeting the U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention goal of a 15 percent obesity rate in the United States.

    The results come from the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index and are based on interviews with more than 350,000 American adults between Jan. 2 and Dec. 29, 2011. Participants reported their height and weight, which was used to calculate body mass index, or BMI, a measure of a person's fatness. BMI scores of 30 or greater are considered obese. (For example, a 5-foot-4-inch woman who weighs 174 pounds or more, or a 5-foot-10-inch man who weighs 209 pounds or more would have a BMI of 30.)

    The metro areas are based on the U.S. Office of Management and Budget's metropolitan statistical areas, which in many cases include more than one city. For instance, the San Jose, Calif., statistical area also includes the smaller nearby cities of Sunnyvale and Santa Clara.

    Top 10 most obese metro areas (with percent of residents considered obese):

    • McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas: 38.8 percent
    • Binghamton, N.Y.: 37.6
    • Huntington-Ashland, W. Va., Ky., Ohio: 36.0
    • Rockford, Ill.: 35.5
    • Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 33.8
    • Charleston, W. Va.: 33.8
    • Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla.: 33.5
    • Topeka, Kans.: 33.3
    • Kennewick-Pasco-Richland, Wash.: 33.2
    • Reading, Penn.: 32.7

    (See full list of cities' obesity rates)

    10 least obese metro areas:

    • Boulder, Colo.: 12.1 percent
    • Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn.: 14.5
    • Fort Collins-Loveland, Colo.: 14.6
    • Barnstable Town, Mass.: 15.9
    • Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Goleta, Calif.: 16.4
    • Naples-Marco Island, Fla.: 16.5
    • Trenton-Ewing, N.J.: 16.8
    • Provo-Orem, Utah: 17.1
    • Colorado Springs, Colo.: 17.4
    • San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, Calif.: 17.5

    The nation's average obesity rate has held steady at about 26 percent in 2011, while the average for the 10 most obese metro areas was 34.8 percent, compared with an average of 15.9 percent for the least obese metro areas surveyed.

    Adult obesity rates were higher than 15 percent in all but three of the 190 metropolitan areas that Gallup and Healthways surveyed in 2011. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas, residents were the most likely to be obese, at 38.8 percent, while people living in Boulder, Colo., were the least likely, at 12.1 percent.

    Supporting an abundance of research linking obesity with a long list of health ailments, those living in the 10 most obese areas were much more likely, compared with the skinniest cities, to report chronic diseases, including diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and depression, at some point in their lives. For instance, compared with people living in the lowest-obesity cities, residents of the most obese areas were 70 percent more likely to report diabetes, 58 percent more likely to have had a heart attack, 30 percent more likely to report a diagnosis of depression, and 23 percent more likely to report high cholesterol, Gallup noted. [ Infographic: Diabetes & Obesity in US ]

    Obesity not only plagues the individual, it can also drain Americans' wallets, with the National Institutes of Health estimating the average incremental health-care cost for an obese person is $1,429 every year. With that number, Gallup estimates that in the 10 metro areas with the highest obesity rates, Americans cumulatively pay about $1 billion more in annual health-care costs than if those states had obesity rates of 15 percent.

    For example, the McAllen-Edinburg-Mission metro area pays more than $400 million in unnecessary health-care costs each year because of its high obesity rate. If it reduced the obesity rate to 15 percent, the area could potentially save more than $250 million annually, Gallup estimates.

    The bottom line, according to Gallup officials, is a grim one: "Even in metro areas that consistently post among the lowest obesity rates in the nation, such as Boulder and Fort Collins-Loveland, at least one in eight residents are still obese," they write on their website. "The health and economic burden of the chronic conditions resulting from obesity is very real and very significant."

    More from LiveScience:

    7 Diet Tricks That Really Work

    8 Reasons Our Waistlines Are Expanding

    9 Myths That Can Make You Fat

    50 comments

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