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                            | Promoting Health is not the business of this industry  Opposing Claim1 #236774 The argument that young vulnerable girls are being impacted negatively by too much comparing of themselves with the models of Vogue and Glamour resulting in eating disorders is not supported by data.   |   The South Carolina Department of Mental Health claims that one in 200 American women suffer from anorexia, as opposed to the American Heart Association's statistic of 39.4 million women suffering from obesity. So that's half a percent against 34 percent.  According to the National Institute of Diabetes and and Digestive Kidney Disease over 66% of adults are overweight or obese.   The British NHS survey of Disordered Eating noted 620 hospital treatments for anorexia or bulimia (with some patients registered twice or more) for 2005 to 2006 as opposed to 17,458 for the same period for obesity.  The CDC data and statistics indicates that 17% of children and adolescents alone are not just overweight but obese.  Higher income and higher education are correlated with lower obesity rates and these are precisely the women who can afford these fashions and thus they are the true targets of the advertisers who use models to promote their clothing lines.                     Adult Obesity Facts Obesity  is common, serious and costly      - More  than one-third of U.S. adults (35.7%) are obese. [Read data brief 
  [PDF-528Kb]]      - Obesity-related  conditions include heart     disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and certain types of  cancer, some of     the leading causes of preventable death. [Read guidelines
 ]       - In  2008, medical costs associated with     obesity were estimated at $147 billion; the  medical costs for people     who are obese were $1,429 higher  than those of normal weight. [Read summary
 ]     Obesity affects some groups more than others      - Non-Hispanic  blacks have the highest     age-adjusted rates of obesity (49.5%) compared with  Mexican Americans     (40.4%), all Hispanics (39.1%) and non-Hispanic whites (34.3%)  [See JAMA. 2012;307(5):491-497.  doi:10.1001/jama.2012.39].
    Obesity  and socioeconomic status [ Read data brief   [PDF-1.07Mb]]       - Among  non-Hispanic black and     Mexican-American men, those with higher incomes are more  likely to be     obese than those with low income. 
      - Higher income  women are less likely to be obese than low-income women. 
      - There is no  significant relationship     between obesity and education among men. Among women,  however, there is     a trend—those with college degrees are less likely to be  obese     compared with less educated women. 
      - Between  1988–1994 and 2007–2008 the prevalence of obesity increased in adults at all  income and education levels.
     New baseline established in 2011 for state Obesity rates      - Changes  to the CDC’s BRFSS     and to  exclusion criteria result in a new baseline for estimated state     adult obesity prevalence  starting with the 2011 data.  Because of     these changes, estimates of obesity prevalence from 2011 forward cannot     be  compared to estimates from previous years. 
      - Shifts in estimates from previous years     may be  the results of the new methods, rather than measurable changes     in the  percentages.  The direction and magnitude  of changes in each     state varies. These variations may depend on the  characteristics of the     population.
      - State prevalence  of obesity remained high across the country in 2011.                    
    Obesity prevalence in 2011 varies across states and regions      - By  state, obesity prevalence ranged from     20.7% in Colorado to 34.9% in Mississippi  in 2011. No state had a     prevalence of obesity less than 20%. 39 states had a  prevalence of 25%     or more; 12 of these states had a prevalence of 30% or more: Alabama,     Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky,  Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,     Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas,  and West Virginia. 
      - The South  had the highest prevalence of     obesity (29.5%), followed by the Midwest (29.0%),  the Northeast (25.3%)     and the West (24.3%).
                                        | State |              Prevalence |              Confidence Interval |                                 | Alabama |              32.0 |              (30.5, 33.5)  |                                 | Alaska |              27.4 |              (25.3, 29.7)  |                                 | Arizona |              24.7 |              (22.7, 26.9)  |                                 | Arkansas |              30.9 |              (28.8, 33.1)  |                                 | California |              23.8 |              (22.9, 24.7)  |                                 | Colorado |              20.7 |              (19.7, 21.8)  |                                 | Connecticut |              24.5 |              (23.0, 26.0)  |                                 | Delaware |              28.8 |              (26.9, 30.7)  |                                 | District of Columbia |              23.7 |              (21.9, 25.7)  |                                 | Florida |              26.6 |              (25.4, 27.9)  |                                 | Georgia |              28.0 |              (26.6, 29.4)  |                                 | Hawaii |              21.8 |              (20.4, 23.4)  |                                 | Idaho |              27.0 |              (25.3, 28.9)  |                                 | Illinois |              27.1 |              (25.4, 28.9)  |                                 | Indiana |              30.8 |              (29.5, 32.3)  |                                 | Iowa |              29.0 |              (27.6, 30.3)  |                                 | Kansas |              29.6 |              (28.7, 30.4)  |                                 | Kentucky |              30.4 |              (28.9, 31.9)  |                                 | Louisiana |              33.4 |              (32.0, 34.9)  |                                 | Maine |              27.8 |              (26.8, 28.9)  |                                 | Maryland |              28.3 |              (26.9, 29.7)  |                                 | Massachusetts |              22.7 |              (21.8, 23.7)  |                                 | Michigan |              31.3 |              (30.0, 32.6)  |                                 | Minnesota |              25.7 |              (24.6, 26.8)  |                                 | Mississippi |              34.9 |              (33.5, 36.3)  |                                 | Missouri |              30.3 |              (28.6, 32.0)  |                                 | Montana |              24.6 |              (23.3, 26.0)  |                                 | Nebraska |              28.4 |              (27.6, 29.2)  |                                 | Nevada |              24.5 |              (22.5, 26.6)  |                                 | New Hampshire |              26.2 |              (24.7, 27.7)  |                                 | New Jersey |              23.7 |              (22.7, 24.8)  |                                 | New Mexico |              26.3 |              (25.1, 27.6)  |                                 | New York |              24.5 |              (23.2, 25.9)  |                                 | North Carolina |              29.1 |              (27.7, 30.6)  |                                 | North Dakota |              27.8 |              (26.3, 29.4)  |                                 | Ohio |              29.6 |              (28.3, 31.0)  |                                 | Oklahoma |              31.1 |              (29.7, 32.5)  |                                 | Oregon |              26.7 |              (25.2, 28.3)  |                                 | Pennsylvania |              28.6 |              (27.3, 29.8)  |                                 | Rhode Island |              25.4 |              (23.9, 27.0)  |                                 | South Carolina |              30.8 |              (29.6, 32.1)  |                                 | South Dakota |              28.1 |              (26.3, 30.1)  |                                 | Tennessee |              29.2 |              (26.8, 31.7)  |                                 | Texas |              30.4 |              (29.1, 31.8)  |                                 | Utah |              24.4 |              (23.4, 25.5)  |                                 | Vermont |              25.4 |              (24.1, 26.8)  |                                 | Virginia |              29.2 |              (27.5, 30.9)  |                                 | Washington |              26.5 |              (25.3, 27.7)  |                                 | West Virginia |              32.4 |              (30.9, 34.0)  |                                 | Wisconsin |              27.7 |              (25.8, 29.7)  |                                 | Wyoming |              25.0 |              (23.5, 26.6)  |                      The History  of State Obesity Prevalence      - There  was a dramatic increase in obesity in the United States from 1990 through 2010. 
      - State  prevalence prior to 2011 is provided for historical     information only.  Historical rates should not be compared to  2011     state obesity prevalence due to changes in survey methods.
      - No  state met the nation's Healthy People 2010
      goal to lower obesity prevalence to 15%.  Rather, in 2010, there were     12 states with an  obesity prevalence of 30%. In 2000, no state had an     obesity prevalence of 30%  or more. [Read article]       - The  animated map below shows the history of United States obesity prevalence from  1985 through 2010.
                                     | 2010 State Obesity Rates |                                 | State |              % |              State |              % |              State |              % |              State |              % |                                 | Alabama |              32.2 |              Illinois |              28.2 |              Montana |              23.0 |              Rhode Island |              25.5 |                                 | Alaska |              24.5 |              Indiana |              29.6 |              Nebraska |              26.9 |              South Carolina |              31.5 |                                 | Arizona |              24.3 |              Iowa |              28.4 |              Nevada |              22.4 |              South Dakota |              27.3 |                                 | Arkansas |              30.1 |              Kansas |              29.4 |              New Hampshire |              25.0 |              Tennessee |              30.8 |                                 | California |              24.0 |              Kentucky |              31.3 |              New Jersey |              23.8 |              Texas |              31.0 |                                 | Colorado |              21.0 |              Louisiana |              31.0 |              New Mexico |              25.1 |              Utah |              22.5 |                                 | Connecticut |              22.5 |              Maine |              26.8 |              New York |              23.9 |              Vermont |              23.2 |                                 | Delaware |              28.0 |              Maryland |              27.1 |              North Carolina |              27.8 |              Virginia |              26.0 |                                 | District of Columbia |              22.2 |              Massachusetts |              23.0 |              North Dakota |              27.2 |              Washington |              25.5 |                                 | Florida |              26.6 |              Michigan |              30.9 |              Ohio |              29.2 |              West Virginia |              32.5 |                                 | Georgia |              29.6 |              Minnesota |              24.8 |              Oklahoma |              30.4 |              Wisconsin |              26.3 |                                 | Hawaii |              22.7 |              Mississippi |              34.0 |              Oregon |              26.8 |              Wyoming |              25.1 |                                 | Idaho |              26.5 |              Missouri |              30.5 |              Pennsylvania |              28.6 |                |                                               To receive email updates, enter your email address:           Download the New Baseline Map        Changed Methods, New Baseline   Like all public health surveillance systems, BRFSS must occasionally change its methods to adapt  to the changing world and to maintain validity.   The  changes to the BRFSS affect obesity prevalence estimates, and mean that data collected in 2010 and before can’t be  compared to the 2011 estimates. Learn more about the changes  to the BRFSS.            Download the  Historical Maps   The history of the increase  in state obesity prevalence is depicted in a PowerPoint slide  presentation format  . (31 slides total, PPT-3Mb). Estimates of obesity prevalence from 2011 forward cannot be compared to estimates from previous years.  This is also  available as a text-only Acrobat file   [PDF-472k].                       Centers for Disease Control and Prevention   1600 Clifton Rd. Atlanta, GA 30333, USA  800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636) TTY: (888) 232-6348 - Contact CDC–INFO           |  
  
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                         
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