MELBOURNE, Jun 20, 2008 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Australia is the fattest nation in
the world, with more than 9 million adults classified as obese or overweight, a
new study indicates.
The study reported Australians outweigh U.S. residents and 123,000 Aussies could
experience premature deaths during the next 20 years, The Age reported.
Four million Australians -- 26 percent of the adult population -- are considered
obese, compared to 25 percent of Americans, the report by Melbourne's Baker IDI
Heart and Diabetes Institute said. An additional 5 million Australians are
considered overweight.
If the crisis isn't averted, obesity experts said health costs could exceed $6
billion and hospitals would have to admit an additional 700,000 people heart
attacks, strokes and blood clots caused by excess pounds.
Adults most at risk of premature death are in the 45-to-64 age group, with 70
percent of men and 60 percent of women classified as obese, the report said.
The data were based on more than 14,000 people at rural and metropolitan sites
in all Australian states and territories, The Age said. Participants had their
body mass index recorded by having their weight, height and waist measured as
part of a national blood pressure screening day in 2007.
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