A new government telephone survey released Tuesday puts the adult  obesity rate at nearly 27 percent and rising. A more scientific survey  has already said the rate is 34 percent and holding steady.
Experts believe the 27 percent is probably an underestimate, because  it's based on what people say. People tend to say they weigh less than  they actually do and say they are taller than they are.
But the fact that it's catching up to the more accepted 34 percent  estimate could suggest people are becoming more accurate when they talk  about their girth. It's one explanation, anyway, said Dr. William Dietz,  of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"It is possible people are paying more attention to their weight and  reporting it more accurately," said Dietz, director of the CDC's  Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity.
The new results are  based on a telephone survey of about 400,000 people who were asked  their height and weight. CDC researchers then calculate whether the  person is obese, following a standard formula for body mass index.
Under the formula, a 5-foot-4 woman is obese if she weighs 174 pounds  or more, a 5-foot-10  man fits that description if he weighs at least  209 pounds.
The study found that nearly 27 percent of the surveyed adults said  they were obese in 2009, up from about 25.5 percent in 2007, a small but  statistically significant increase.
Earlier this year, the CDC released results from another study that  actually weighed and measured 5,700 adults. It found that 34 percent are  obese; results have been similar in the last three surveys.
The differing surveys mean the CDC is reporting that obesity is increasing — and that it's not.
"We have somewhat contradictory data," because the studies were done differently and sampled different populations, Dietz said.
There could be several reasons why the telephone survey produced  different results, said Dr. K.M. Venkat Narayan, an Emory University  public health professor familiar with the two studies.
For example, the phone survey included only people with landline  telephones, meaning others with cell phones were not part of the data,  he said. It could be that a significant number of people who exclusively  use cell phones are obese and not counted.
As for people underreporting their height and weight, "it's not so  much lying," but rather that they don't regularly get on a scale,  Narayan said.
The new report also found that in nine states at least 30 percent of  the adults were obese in 2009. The states were Alabama, Mississippi,  Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Oklahoma and West  Virginia. In 2007, only Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee had that many  obese people.
 
Source: The Associated Press
Americans may be getting honest about their weight
Posted by
wil tran
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
         ATLANTA — Are Americans becoming more realistic about their weight?     
That theory could explain why the gap appears to be closing in what people say they weigh and what actual measurements report.Labels: Diet and nutrition
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