It's often said that today's children will have
shorter average life spans than their parents, because so many suffer from
obesity. But there is another view that says they will live longer - at the risk
of spending their twilight years in poor health.
The idea that children alive today will die younger than their parents
has been popularised by Michelle Obama
and Jamie
Oliver - but the assertion that they "may on average, live less
healthy and possibly even shorter lives than their parents" originates in scholarly
research.
Not all experts are convinced, however.
It's true that the number of people who are obese now is higher than in
the past. Figures published in the Lancet earlier this year put the figure at
2.1bn worldwide, up from 875 million in 1980.
It's also true that obesity-related illnesses have been on the rise. It
was reported this week that the UK is suffering a "national health
emergency" because of the numbers being diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, an
illness which is often linked to obesity.
But the risk of dying from heart attacks and strokes, both associated
with obesity, is in fact lower than in previous decades, according to a leading
expert in the field.
"If you take Britain as an example, the probability of dying from
the sorts of things caused by being overweight has gone down by a factor of
four," says Sir Richard Peto, professor of medical statistics at Oxford
University.
"If you go back 30 years then the chance we would die from a heart
attack or stroke and diseases like that in middle age was 16% whereas it was 4%
in 2010."
This trend is replicated in most parts of the world, in part because
the treatment of heart problems is now much better than it used to be.
But some people think that being fatter may actually lengthen rather
than shorten life.
Katherine Flegal, an epidemiologist at the National Centre for Health
Statistics in Hyattsville Maryland, and her team analysed 97 studies into
causes of death and concluded that people deemed "overweight" by
international standards were 6% less likely to die than those of
"normal" weight.
People are considered overweight if they have a body mass index (BMI) over
25 and obese with a BMI over 30.
Flegal's paper, published in the American Medical Journal in January
last year, says it's possible that overweight people get better medical care -
either because they show symptoms of disease earlier or because they're
screened more regularly for chronic diseases, such as diabetes or heart
disease.
It drew a hostile response from some public health experts, who have
been advising people for decades to watch their weight.
A number of other researchers, on the other hand, have embraced
Flegal's work and see it as the latest illustration of what is known as the
Obesity Paradox - the notion that there is an inverse relationship between body
fat and risk of death.
At least one study has suggested that heavier
people are more likely to survive certain operations.
Fat or not, people around the world are likely to live longer than
previous generations, says Peto.
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