Monday, October 15, 2007

A Drink Or Two And Obesity Surgery May Prove A Dangerous Mixture
By Donald Saunders

Following years of debate we are finally coming around to the inescapable conclusion that surgery is the only really effective and lasting solution to the problem of severe obesity. And it is certainly not before time!

Today obesity is probably the number one health problem in the Western world and in the US alone almost 60 percent of the population is overweight, with close to 24 percent being obese and 3 percent severely obese. Now 3 percent may not appear to be big figure but when you realize that it adds up to more than 9 million extremely obese individuals this is a fairly major problem.

In spite of the fact that more and more attention is being turned towards the problem of obesity and its cure, it is surprising how much we still have to learn about the condition, including the affect that alcohol can have on people who have undergone obesity surgery.

For a considerable time now there has been a reasonable amount of anecdotal evidence that people who have undergone weight loss surgery are affected more by alcohol but it was not until the end of last year that any real attempt was made to assess the extent or otherwise of the problem.

In a fairly small-scale study the affects of alcohol on 19 people who had undergone weight loss surgery was compared to the affects on 17 control subjects. The individuals taking part in the study each drank a small 5 ounce glass of red wine and their breath alcohol was then measured at 5 minute intervals until it had fallen back to zero.

The study found that alcohol levels reached a higher level in the weight loss patients and also that they took far longer to return to zero. Perhaps most interestingly, the study also demonstrated that just }a single|one} small glass of wine was sufficient to put the breath alcohol level in some weight loss surgery patients above the legal limit for driving in several US states.

The reason for the increased affects of alcohol on weight loss surgery patients is quite simple to understand because surgery reduces the volume of the stomach and bypasses part of the intestine, both areas of the body that are responsible for breaking down alcohol before it finds its way into the bloodstream.

So exactly what does this mean for weight loss surgery patients?

Well, aside from the obvious need to be careful and certainly to refrain from driving after drinking even very small amounts of alcohol, the implications for weight loss surgery patients do in fact go a bit deeper.

One particular problem is that alcohol is a relaxant and this causes problems when it comes to post-operative weight loss and to maintaining weight loss. As alcohol relaxes the stomach, including the lower esophageal sphincter, and the intestine, patients who enjoy alcohol can eat more and the presence of alcohol effectively counters the affects of surgery. As if this were not bad enough a significant number of people are more socially active following surgery and this generally means an increasing consumption of alcohol.

There will still need to be a great deal more research carried out of course but, in the end, the fact is that people who have undergone obesity surgery need to be aware of the risks of alcohol and act accordingly.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders
What Is The Risk Of Gastric Bypass Surgery?
By
Jeanette Pollock

As with any invasive procedure, when the body is invaded by foreign objects and either cut or punctured in some way, there is always a risk involved. This could include anything from a simple infection to more complicated bleeding problems. The risk of gastric bypass surgery is no different.

To be specific the risk of gastric bypass surgery is similar to the risk of any surgery. This includes: clotting, wound infection, hernia and/or ulcers. In addition, one of the specific risks of bypass surgery is something called the dumping syndrome. The dumping syndrome occurs when food moves too quickly through the intestines. This, in turn, can cause sweating, nausea, and/or diarrhea. Eating sweats or other types of ìjunk foodî only serves to make the ìdumping syndromeî worse.

Another risk of gastric bypass surgery is to end up suffering from poor nutrition. Because the surgery limits the amout of food intake at any given time, if proper nutrional guidelines are not adhered to the patient may end up not consuming enough nutrition to ensure proper health. In other words, because such a small of amount of food is consumed it is important to make every bite count.

In addition, there is the risk of gastric bypass surgery of the patient misunderstanding the importance of his/her role in their continued weight loss program. The surgery does not eliminated the need for proper diet and exercise. If the patient does not follow the physicianís instructions it is possible for the patient to become so malnourished that hospitalization is required.

Also, because severly obese patients are frequently suffering from other obesity-induced diseases such as heart disease, death is also a risk of grastric bypass surgery. The statistics concerning the death rate of gastric bypass patients vary. Some estimate that the death rate is one in two-hundred. Others estimate the death rate thirty days after the surgery to be as high as one in fifty. Regardless, of which statistics you believe the death rate is a risk of gastric bypass surgery which must be taken into consideration when deciding whether or not to have this operation.

Jeanette Pollock is a freelance author .

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jeanette_Pollock
What Does A Gastric Bypass Cost?
By Jeanette Pollock

A gastric bypass cost varies from around $20,000 to $35,000. That is the bad news. The good news is that sometimes the gastric bypass cost is covered by your insurance company.

Your insurance company may have a couple of prerequisites, though, before it will cover the gastric bypass cost. These prerequisites may include such things as a complete medical physical before the surgery. They many require documented proof that you have tried to loose weight by other recommended diets, i.e. Weight Watchers, Optifast, etc. The insurance company may also require proof that you have failed to loose weight on a medically supervised diet and examination of your mental capacities showing that you are mentally stable.

This may sound complicated but specialized medical centers, e.g. medical centers that specialize in weight loss programs and plans usually have patient representatives available to assist you in understanding your insurance companies plans and requirements. These patient representatives can walk you through the legal maze of your insurance coverage and help you determine if your insurance company will cover the gastric bypass cost. They can also help you determine if you have a co-pay or a deductible to meet before the insurance company pays the gastric bypass cost.

Although initially the gastric bypass cost may seem high when you consider the cost of obesity in terms of long-term health care problems the cost does not seem as high. For example, gastric bypass surgery and the long term weight loss that is the result of such surgery usually results in the elimination of such medical problems as high blood pressure, sleep apnea, diabetes and high cholesterol. When the costs of medicating and treating such health problems over the lifetime of the patient are calculated the gastric bypass cost no longer seems excessive.

For the obese patient who has tried everything and failed to loss weight, the gastric bypass cost is a small price to pay for a lifetime free from obesity and its related healthcare problems.

Jeanette Pollock is a freelance author.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jeanette_Pollock
What is Gastric Bypass Insurance?
By Jeanette Pollock


Gastric bypass insurance is any insurance that covers the cost of gastric bypass surgery. Today, most insurance companies will cover the cost of gastric bypass surgery as long as it is deemed medically necessary for the health of the patient. However, it frequently happens that an initial application for gastric bypass insurance will be denied. When that happens, simply reapply for gastric bypass insurance coverage. Frequently, the application is approved on resubmission.

Gastric bypass insurance covers the cost of gastric bypass surgery. Gastric bypass surgery is a permanent method of weight loss wherein the patientís stomach is reduced drastically in size. This causes the patient to fill full quickly after eating only small amounts of food. This, in turn, results in dramatic weight loss. Gastric bypass surgery is usually recommended only for patients that need to lose one-hundred or more pounds of excess weight.

If you have decided that gastric bypass surgery is a viable method of weight loss for you, you will want to make sure you have gastric bypass insurance. One of the ways to do this is to secure health insurance before planning and scheduling the operation. An excellent way to find good, comprehensive gastric bypass insurance is by searching the internet.

For example, at mostchoice.com you can fill in their on-line application form and receive rate quotes from over 140 insurance companies. In addition, Medicaid will provide gastric bypass insurance coverage if the patientís weight is a contributing factor to life threatening diseases such as diabetes, sleep apnea, and/or high blood pressure. In the case of Medicaid, a primary care physician must make the referral to the gastric bypass surgeon. Also, the surgeon must be a registered Medicaid provider.

When selecting health insurance coverage make sure you read the insurance companyís fine print. Some health insurance companies list gastric bypass surgery as one of their non-covered procedures. If this is the case, you will want to select a different gastric bypass insurance company one that will cover the treatment and let you start a new life, one free from obesity.


Jeanette Pollock is a freelance author.Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jeanette_Pollock

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Finding A Gastric Bypass Surgeon
By Jeanette Pollock

You've made up your mind. You can't take it any longer, and now you are going to do something about it. You've decided to have gastric bypass surgery or what is sometimes called the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. The problem is how do you find a gastric bypass surgeon?

Thanks to the internet finding a gastric bypass surgeon has never been easier. Dozens of web sites exist that will not only help you select a qualified surgeon but will also explain the procedure to you. For example, Obese Help has a world of information about obesity and gastric bypass surgery. The site has links covering such topics as before and after surgery, qualifications for surgery and insurance coverage.

Another great site for information about gastric bypass surgery is WeightLossSurgery.com. This site explains the cost of gastric bypass surgery and what insurance companies may require before covering the surgery.

However, once your mind is made up to have this surgery you need to select a gastric bypass surgeon. The absolute best place to find a gastric bypass surgeon is at DocShop.com. This web site allows you to search for a gastric bypass surgeon state by state. A complete search engine is available which lists each of the fifty states and Puerto Rico. In addition, it also has a link to gastric bypass surgeons located outside of the United States.

In addition it is simple to use. For example, when you click on the link for California a new page pops up. On this page are over twenty major population areas for the state of California. When you click on, for example, San Francisco, three specialty physicians are found. Each of the clinics listed specialize in weight loss, and the links listed include a profile, a web site link, and contact information.

You can also located a gastric bypass surgeon by using the ìdoctor finderî link provided by the American Medical Association.

eanette Pollock is a freelance author and website owner of obesitytopics.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jeanette_Pollock

Finding A Gastric Bypass Surgeon
By Jeanette Pollock

You've made up your mind. You can't take it any longer, and now you are going to do something about it. You've decided to have gastric bypass surgery or what is sometimes called the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. The problem is how do you find a gastric bypass surgeon?

Thanks to the internet finding a gastric bypass surgeon has never been easier. Dozens of web sites exist that will not only help you select a qualified surgeon but will also explain the procedure to you. For example, Obese Help has a world of information about obesity and gastric bypass surgery. The site has links covering such topics as before and after surgery, qualifications for surgery and insurance coverage.

Another great site for information about gastric bypass surgery is WeightLossSurgery.com. This site explains the cost of gastric bypass surgery and what insurance companies may require before covering the surgery.

However, once your mind is made up to have this surgery you need to select a gastric bypass surgeon. The absolute best place to find a gastric bypass surgeon is at DocShop.com. This web site allows you to search for a gastric bypass surgeon state by state. A complete search engine is available which lists each of the fifty states and Puerto Rico. In addition, it also has a link to gastric bypass surgeons located outside of the United States.

In addition it is simple to use. For example, when you click on the link for California a new page pops up. On this page are over twenty major population areas for the state of California. When you click on, for example, San Francisco, three specialty physicians are found. Each of the clinics listed specialize in weight loss, and the links listed include a profile, a web site link, and contact information.

You can also located a gastric bypass surgeon by using the ìdoctor finderî link provided by the American Medical Association. By going to their web site: www.ama-assa.org and following their click-through links you can quickly find a gastric bypass surgeon also called a bariatric surgeon in your area.


Jeanette Pollock is a freelance author




Obesity Is a Genetic Predisposition
By Valerian D.

Recently, a study conducted at the Boston University Medical School concluded that a very small genetic change in DNA area is the leading cause of obese propensity. The incriminated gene, its name is INSIG2, plays a strategic role in fat production and makes somebody more prone to be obese by simply changing its normal G-status into C-status (the DNA code is made up of four letters)

The conclusion is blaming people for their obesity is a bit like blaming people for being bold or short.

I personally think the research team finding is real, but I also see a hidden danger in this approach. The danger is to accept unconditionally the fact that despite our effort, there is no way to control our weight . The consequence might be something like "don't waist your time trying to loose your, it is genetic anyways". Accepting this irreversible role of genetic is like considering obesity and obesity related disease as our normal situation.

The truth is that folks do not become overweight while the amount of food calories is completely used by its body when performing a physical and intellectual activity. It's also a fact some people are genetically prone to be slim. Of course, for this very lucky people staying thin is much easier than for people having a genetic propensity for obesity. But I know that a genetic predisposition to something isn't a given that it will happen to you in any condition, it just means you may have to work harder to avoid it.

Valerian D. is a freelance writer interested in items such as genetic obesity propensity
Watching TV Is a Risk Factor for Childhood Obesity
By Valerian D.

A recent study shows with no doubt the close link between viewing unhealthy food advertisements on TV and overweight children. According to many reports watching television is the most engaging activity, except sleeping, for many kids. Besides the fact watching TV is a sedentary activity, the study concluded that the consequence of averaging 22 hours of viewing a week is high exposure of children to any kind of commercials.

Because these days too many children may spend money on their own, they are being exploited by clever marketing and food companies often target their campaigns to this group. The study provides strong evidence that television is very effective in pushing kids to eat the junk foods that are advertised. As a result, kids who spend more time watching television also eat more of the low-nutrient and calorie-dense foods. Television watching time was also founded to be the strongest lead to additional consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages.

The major social concern is the health of the kids around the world is put at risk by the marketing of junk food trough television. The rising epidemic of childhood obesity in EU and the United States has been associated to diabetes and cardiovascular disease in even young children, and to an accumulation of health troubles in their later life.

Valerian D is a freelance writer interested in health issues that requires a social concern such as childhood obesity

An Open Letter to Masters Students in Exercise Physiology
By Rick Osbourn

Finding a thesis topic that’s meaningful, but one that has yet to be researched from so many different angles that it’s old and worn out, is a major challenge for many students hoping to win a Masters degree from any university. In other words, to find a topic that has never been researched before, and that could be profoundly meaningful would be a Master’s student’s ticket to a lifetime of good fortune. So if you're a Masters student in Exercise Physiology, I suggest that you seriously consider the following opportunity.

Exploding Across the World

Childhood obesity has exploded exponentially in developed nations to the point that it’s now considered an epidemic. The new US Surgeon General has recently labeled childhood obesity his # 1 priority. And we’re spending multiple billions in order to turn the tide, but we’re failing so miserably that the odds of winning the war on childhood obesity look even worse than the odds of winning the war in Iraq. In light of all this I’d like to say that anyone who discovers a practical, affordable, measurable, and documentable antidote to such a monumental problem could easily be in a position to be nominated for a Nobel Prize in Medicine.

A Documented Bite Out of Childhood Obesity

So, here’s the deal. A childhood obesity prevention strategy has recently been chronicled in a new book entitled Operation Pull Your Own Weight: A Radically Simple Solution to Childhood Obesity. The basis for this strategy is the intuitive, common sense observation that kids who can do pull ups are NEVER obese. That being the case, their proponents contend that for every child who learns to do pull ups, we’re taking one more DOCUMENTED bite out of childhood obesity. Furthermore, if they maintain that ability, they’re effectively IMMUNIZED against obesity for a lifetime.

It’s Never Been Scientifically Tested

Where’s the rub you ask? Well, the rub is that to date, no credentialed academician, no Professor of Exercise Physiology, no Ph.D. or Masters student has ever conducted a scientific study to prove or to disprove this basic claim. Let me repeat that. Despite the fact that Physical Educators across the country would endorse this intuitive observation, NOBODY has ever conducted a study that correlates the ability to do pull ups with childhood obesity prevention.

Let me add that the research for this study could be done in a matter of weeks. The write up would take another week or two, but so far nobody has stepped forward to claim the prize. Furthermore, this simple study could have profound effects on millions of kids around the world, yet to date nobody’s in a position to be nominated for that Nobel Prize in Medicine mentioned earlier.

The Simple Four Part Study

So for an ambitious Masters student who’s longing to make a name for themselves before they ever graduate, I propose the following four part study.
• Take 100 young students (say grades 3 and 4) and divide them into two groups, those who can do pull ups (group A), and those who can’t do pull ups (group B).
• Measure the body compositions of all 100 students.
• Determine the average body composition for both groups.
• Compare these two averages for significant differences.

If Wrong…But If Right

The null hypothesis of course will be, there is no significant difference between the average body compositions of group A and group B. On the other hand if Operation Pull Your Own Weight is right and there is a significant difference between the two groups, you’ve just discovered that natural, practical, affordable, measurable, and documentable antidote that will put you on the path for being nominated for a Nobel Prize in Medicine. So there you have it folks. Now, who wants to step forward, do the research, and complete a thesis that could make a real difference instead of another one that does little more than just gather dust?

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based, freelance writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne

Of Pull Ups, Childhood Obesity Prevention, and the Future of Democracy in the USA
By Rick Osbourne

Recently I saw a documentary movie in which an extraordinary old British gent contended that democracy is still the most revolutionary concept that the human race has ever encountered. He proceeded to observe that despotic governments manipulate and control their people by keeping them fearful, demoralized, and in debt.

Than he added, “Demoralized people don’t vote, they don’t take responsibility for themselves, and they don’t maintain their right to a political democracy,” he said. “You see it takes strong, healthy, resilient, self reliant, and self confident people to form and to maintain a democracy. Strong people are much harder to control than demoralized people.” I found myself wanting to stand up in the audience in order to shout YES!!!!

OPYOW and Rugged Individualism

In that light I’d like to make the following comments about Operation Pull Your Own Weight, a program primarily focused on childhood obesity prevention, and on developing strong, resilient, self reliant kids who refuse to drink from the mass produced, conventional fountains of indoctrination. Above all else, these kids think for themselves.

There are those who have embraced OPYOW because of its ruggedly individualistic connotations, and I don’t deny that rugged individualism is part of its appeal. We actively applaud strength, resilience, self-reliance, and personal responsibility taking behaviors. They are key components of being human in the fullest sense.

Social Darwinism VS Enlightened Self Interest

On the other hand, OPYOW is actively opposed to Social Darwinism, a theory that endorses a self centered, me first, to hell with you, survival of the fittest orientation to human existence. That may be part of American folklore, but in real life, self centered individualism all by itself is psychologically alienating and socially counterproductive.

Instead OPYOW favors enlightened self interest, a concept that takes the position “what’s good for my family is good for me. And what’s good for my neighborhood is good for my family. And what’s good for my city, county, state, nation, world, is good for my neighborhood, my family, and me.” In the words of some wise old man somewhere, “We’re all in this together.” Failing to understand and to act according to the principal of enlightened self interest undermines democracy.

OPYOW Salutes…

So does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who can fend for themselves, their family, their friends, and maybe even their city, state, nation, world? Absolutely! Does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who refuse the lure of conventional kool-aid and think for themselves? Without a doubt! And does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who use their strength to help strengthen others and help them to become confident, self reliant, yet also humble, mutually respectful, and therefore fully human? Yeseree Bob.

Egalitarianism, mutual respect, quiet self confidence, and enlightened self interest are at the heart of democracy and Operation Pull Your Own Weight. Hats off to both.

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne
Operation Pull Your Own Weight as a Philosophy of Education
By Rick Osbourne

Strong VS Weak

We believe it’s the nature of all kids to want to be strong at everything and weak at nothing. In other words, you’ll meet plenty of kids these days who are proud of “being bad.” But you won’t meet any who are proud of “being weak” at anything.

We believe that given the right conditions, almost all kids can become a little stronger mentally, spiritually, and physically every day, every week, every month, and every year. And if those strength gains are documented and celebrated publicly, in front of family and friends, these students will soon learn to expect success instead of failure.

Returns on Their Investments

They’ll also learn that there’s a payoff, a return on their investment of time and effort, and that with persistence they can tackle difficult tasks one bite at a time, and expect to succeed in almost anything. You see most kids never learn this lesson and inevitably fall far short of fulfilling their true potential.

Opportunity VS Obligation

We believe that anything presented as an opportunity (you get to do it) will become more highly valued than anything presented as an obligation or a job (you have to do it), and in this light real education (growing stronger at everything) becomes highly valued and this motivates kids to want to participate. On the other hand when something is mandated and students are obligated to participate, it undermines any genuine motivation, and encourages failure to become a self fulfilled prophecy.

Systematically Undermining Motivation and Self Confidence

Finally we believe that kids come to school at various levels of maturity and development, and to require them to compete against each other at a young age is a sure fire way to de-motivate the highest percentage of them who, for all kinds of silly reasons, are variously labeled average, below average, or much worse, by a system that’s effectively designed to undermine the kids it claims to support.

Along with bursting their young motivational bubbles, the system simultaneously strips kids of the self confidence necessary to tackle new challenges and to grow stronger in all kinds of ways. In other words, when motivation and self confidence are systematically undermined, students stop trying. And when they stop trying, failure automatically becomes the self fulfilled prophecy mentioned above.

The Price of Being Cool

Then again when their failure is inevitably paraded in front of family and friends, these kids are prepared with the ready made excuse, “I didn’t try.” You see when you try hard in public, you risk being humiliated…the opposite of being cool. That’s a price many kids are unwilling to pay.

The Natural Antidote

The antidote to this dilemma is to simply compare Johnny in week one to Johnny in week two, Johnny in month one to Johnny in month two, Johnny in year one to Johnny in year two. In the process make sure that Johnny and his friends are aware of the progress he’s made, which in turn strengthens his self confidence, lights his motivational flame, and transforms self fulfilled failure into self fulfilled success.

Fulfilling Our Own Potential

At this school it is our challenge and our privilege, as professional educators, to create the conditions in which all our kids will grow stronger at everything, more confident in themselves, and more capable of taking personal responsibility for their own actions, decisions, and their own lives. To the degree we succeed, we will fulfill our own personal potentials. Carpe diem.

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne
Operation Pull Your Own Weight is Now on You Tube
By Rick Osbourne

A picture, they always say, is worth a thousand words. So, I wonder how many words is a two minute video that’s now posted on You Tube?

Sound Bites That Win

Yes, we’ve written tens of thousands of words, in hundreds of articles, paragraphs, and sentences on the topic of a childhood obesity prevention strategy called Operation Pull Your Own Weight. But reading sentences, paragraphs, and articles is time consuming when compared to watching a two minute video in living color. And in this fast paced age of high tech this and high tech that, shortened, condensed sound bites, reproduced on film stand a much better chance of grabbing your attention or mine.

The You Tube Plunge

That being the case we’ve taken this decidedly simple, low tech, user friendly, cost effective OPYOW strategy and condensed it into a two minute video sound bite and posted it on You Tube. It introduces four kids, two boys and two girls, who are using leg assisted pull ups in conjunction with a height adjustable pull up bar in order to teach themselves to do pull ups, and in the process, to immunize themselves against obesity for a lifetime, or for as long as they maintain their hard won ability.

Now that the video is done, edited, and posted on You Tube, I must admit that it covers lots of ground in very little time, and it requires little to no effort on the part of the viewer who’s checking it out. Not only that, at the end of two minutes I contend that there are very few people, regardless of age or educational background, who fail to get it.

It’s so on the surface. It’s so simple. It’s so close to the tip of your nose that Operation Pull Your Own Weight has been overlooked by the multitude of experts who have been searching high and low for a viable antidote to childhood obesity.

Lets' Redirect Those Billions

But now that it’s on film and posted for all to see, perhaps the billions we’ve been spending annually in a search for the childhood obesity cure can be redirected to teaching kids to pull their own weight, physically and in all kinds of other ways. And if we can accomplish that very doable task, childhood obesity will be in the rear view mirror, and we’ll all be better off for it. Check it out right now.

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Common Sense Takes Documented Bites Out of the Childhood Obesity Epidemic
By Rick Osbourne Platinum Quality Author

Ron Smith is an average gym teacher at an average Midwestern elementary school, who in the fall of 2000 made a very unusual decision. Like other gym teachers around the country, Smith had been reading more and more about the growing crisis in childhood obesity, the multi-millions being spent, producing almost no success stories.

Drawing on his 17 years of teaching/coaching experience, he decided to take it upon himself to eliminate childhood obesity in his school. How he accomplished that goal is a story that every parent, every educator, every pediatrician, and every mentor from sea to shining sea should know about.

The Simple Observation
“I started with a simple observation that every gym teacher in the nation can relate to. From years of fitness testing, I knew that kids who could do pull ups were never obese, and that kids who were obese could never do pull ups. It was an intuitively obvious kind of thing that I thought I could build a case around,” Smith explained.

The Simple Challenge
More specifically, the challenge Smith confronted was to make sure that all the kids who attended his elementary school learned to do pull ups. “According to my observation, if 100% of our kids could do pull ups, none of them would be obese. And as long as they maintained that ability, they’d never become obese,” Smith said. “We named the program Operation Pull Your Own Weight and the rest is history.”

The Results
Historically speaking though, this 21st century miracle took a full four years to reach its goal. The real story then is found in how Ron Smith successfully inspired 100% of his elementary school students to develop their ability to do pull ups, and in the process to eliminate childhood obesity in their school.

Presumption # One
In order to clearly explain the OPYOW phenomena however, there are three fundamental presumptions that need to be understood. First, Smith knew that most kids hate pull ups, But he also recognized that what they really hate is to fail at anything in front of their friends. In fact he noticed that the kids who succeeded on the pull up bar took noticeable pride in being able to tackle a difficult task in front of friends and win.

In other words the successful kids actually liked pull ups because of their public success. From this observation Smith decided that in order for OPYOW to succeed, he had to build public success into the program. “Public success turned out to be the great motivator in OPYOW,” Smith said. “It’s what makes our kids look forward to doing pull ups, when most kids hate the thought of them. Just imagine, a school full of kids who actually look forward to doing pull ups. That’s our school,” he added.

Presumption # Two
Smith’s second presumption was that all kids want to be strong at everything, and weak at nothing. “We eliminated the terms good and bad completely in favor of the terms strong and weak,” Smith said. “I’ve had lots of kids who tell me they want to be bad, but I’ve never met a kid who wants to be weak…at anything. And of course a pull up bar is always associated with strength. For this reason our kids learned to see the pull up bar as an opportunity to get stronger, and they liked it.”

Presumption # Three
The third presumption was that kids prefer opportunity over obligation. For example, it’s an opportunity or a privilege to go out to eat, or to go to the movies. It’s an obligation or a job to mow the grass, or clean the house.

“Once the program began we always treated pull ups as an opportunity to get stronger, and we never forced students to participate. OPYOW was strictly voluntary. But interestingly enough we had 100% participation because the kids saw it as a privilege not a job, which made it an intrinsically valued experience,” Smith said.

Of HAPUB’s and LAP’s
Armed with this original common sense observation and these three presumptions, Smith developed what he calls a height adjustable pull up bar that raises and lowers in one inch increments, in order to accommodate the technique he calls leg assisted pull ups where participants are allowed to jump and pull at the same time. This combination allowed all Smith’s kids to succeed immediately in front of their friends.

The Basic Idea
The basic idea is to lower the bar enough to allow the participant to do at least 8 leg assisted pull ups. If they can only do 7, the bar is lowered enough to allow the student to do 8 repetitions, and that becomes their designated starting point.

“Our kids were allowed to workout on the bar twice a week,” Smith said. “And in workout #2 they were allowed to do nine leg assisted pull ups, in workout # 3 it was ten, in workout # 4 it was eleven, and in workout # 5 it was twelve repetitions. When they successfully complete 12 leg assisted pull ups the bar is raised one inch and the whole eight to twelve scenario is repeated over and over again, until students eventually run out of leg assistance and they’re doing real live pull ups.”

Inch Your Way Up
Done correctly this strategy produces a bunch of kids who succeed regularly, in front of their friends, workout after workout, week after week, month after month until they reach their goal of being able to do conventional pull ups. “Using this strategy, we cultivated a school full of kids who not only learned to do pull ups, but they learned to look forward to the opportunity to get on the bar and get stronger, and to succeed in front of their friends,” Smith said.

Expecting Success
When they’re done with their workout kids inevitably give each other high fives, and congratulate each other,” Smith said. ”In this program our kids systematically learned to expect success instead of expecting failure. And that was a huge asset.”

Thin Slices of Success Add Up A Huge Pile of Success
Smith readily admits to the fact that it took four years to reach his 100% goal. “It’s all about persistence,” he said. “Improve just a little bit every workout, every week, every month, and it’s absolutely astounding what you can accomplish at the end of a year, or in our case, at the end of four years.”

The Six Ideas
What else can be said about this incredibly simple, common sense approach to childhood obesity prevention? “There were six ideas that were drilled into our kids over and over again throughout the year,” said Smith. “We constantly reminded them that they’ll get stronger by working regularly, eating right, getting enough rest at night, and avoiding the negative habits of tobacco, alcohol and drugs. It was also implied that if you failed to workout regularly, to eat right, to get enough rest, and to avoid tobacco, alcohol and drugs, you were making yourself weak. And as I said before, I’ve never met a kid who wants to be weak at anything.”

Personal Responsibility Taking Behavior
Smith’s kids also learned that choosing to work regularly, eat right, get enough rest, and to avoid tobacco alcohol and drugs was mostly up to them. No one else could make those choices for them. “In other words our kids were choosing whether to become strong or weak, and the teacher couldn’t do it for them. Mom and Dad couldn’t do it for them. Their friends couldn’t do it for them. They had to decide for themselves whether they wanted to become strong or weak. So OPYOW promotes personal responsibility taking behavior at a young age,” Smith said.

Bumps in the Road
Was it all smooth sailing? Or were there some bumps in the road along the way? “We had a couple of detractors in the beginning,” Smith said. “For example, one parent thought that OPYOW was built for boys until she saw that her own daughter joyfully participating. Girl’s success is not unusual when you start kids young (K-12) because little girls usually mature faster than little boys, and they’re often the best athletes in class at this age.”

There were other critics who contended that OPYOW had no aerobic component and was far too restrictive. But as Smith eloquently points out, OPYOW was never meant to be a full blown fitness program, but just a great functional antidote to obesity. “On the other hand to the degree that it discourages obesity, it’s also heart friendly by reducing the load 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,” said Smith.

But Just Imagine
“Just imagine if we implemented OPYOW across the nation and we were graduating entire classes of students who could physically pull their own weight. What do you think would happen to the childhood obesity epidemic? It would dry up and blow away overnight. This is not an impossible goal, and the ramifications of such a movement would be beyond any calculator on earth,” Smith said.

Now you have the story of an average gym teacher in an average elementary school in and average Midwestern town who translated an utterly simple observation into a program that solved a big problem in his school. So the question now becomes, if one school can do it, why not one school district? And if one school district, why not one state, one nation, and one world? In any case, hats off to Ron Smith and his OPYOW kids. We need lots more people like Ron, with lots more common sense to tackle lots more problems around the world.

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne

Thursday, September 13, 2007


The Many Virtues of Infinite Measurability
By Rick Osbourne

One of the major stumbling blocks in defeating childhood obesity is the lack of measurability, a way to conveniently evaluate progress, which results in a lack of motivation, and an epidemic that continues to grow like a forest fire raging out of control.

As a matter of fact the National Institute of Medicine recently (9/14/06) issued a disturbing report indicating that after spending over $68,000,000 over five years on just one program (there were many others), because of poor evaluation methods, we still have no idea what works and what doesn’t work. We wasted $68,000,000…surprise, surprise.

If You Can’t Measure It, How Do You Know
But if you lack the ability to measure accurately how will you ever know if you’re winning, losing, or just spinning your wheels? The State of Arkansas for example, is considered to be one of the nation’s leaders in the battle against childhood obesity. Bill Clinton has even gotten into the fray. They decided to measure every child’s body mass index (the most commonly used indicator) and put it on their report card once every quarter…in other words, every nine weeks.

How Do You Motivate Kids
But even if this measurement is accurate and meaningful for kids, which is highly questionable in itself, getting feedback once every nine weeks packs almost no motivational punch at all. By the same token it’s economically impractical to measure on a daily, weekly, or even monthly basis. Once a quarter is about the best they can do.

Other more sophisticated measurement possibilities such as testing percentage of body fat via electronic impedance (computer) or underwater weighing are dramatically more expensive and much less likely to be used by anyone except a professor or grad student in a physiology lab. Furthermore, such models focus on the negative…how fat are you instead of how strong are you? Alack of regular feedback, in combination with their negative connotations DOOM the most conventional strategies to failure. And after years of work, and multi millions spent, we still don’t know what works and what doesn’t work.

Kindergartner Can Measure This
In contrast, the documented measurability factor in a program called Operation Pull Your Own Weight is extremely regular, and highly practical. You need no special instruments, no magic formulas, and almost no specialized training to tell if students are improving or not. If you can count from one to twelve, as most kindergartners can, you qualify. As a matter of fact, elementary school age kids not only can, but they have measured themselves and others without problem. Not only that, but the strength gain focus of this program has very positive, not negative connotations.

The Feedback is Constant
More specifically, OPYOW is based on the old coach's observation that kids who can do pull ups can't be obese. And kids who are obese can't do pull ups. The ability to do pull ups and obesity are mutually exclusive and where you find one, you'll not find the other.

Now, using a height adjustable pull up bar and leg assisted pull ups, (the child’s encouraged to jump and pull at the same time) most kids can learn to do pull ups. The idea is to count and record (document change) the number of repetitions a participant can perform at a particular bar height. The program is initiated by finding a bar height at which a participant can do eight leg assisted pull ups which constitutes workout # one. In workout # 2 they do nine, in workout # 3 they do ten, in workout # 4 they do eleven, and in workout # 5 they do twelve leg assisted pull ups. Then in workout # 6 the bar is raised one inch and the whole eight to twelve scenario begins all over again.

The Motivation is High
In other words each participant is taught how to improve regularly, in very small increments every week, every month, over a prescribed period of time. The progress is highly visible, highly motivating, INFINITELY MEASURABLE, and the positive feedback occurs every single time the participant works out.

Under these conditions, along with public success and celebration (high fives), motivation remains high throughout the program, evaluation becomes extremely easy and affordable, and the focus on strength gain instead of fat loss is positive not negative. In other words, Operation Pull Your Own Weight is extremely affordable, extremely motivating, and INFINITELY MEASURABLE, DOCUMENTABLE, AND EVALUATEABLE.

And In The End, You’ll Know
At the end of a week, a month, a quarter, a year, you’ll know, unequivocally, if you’re winning the war, losing the war, or just treading water. You’ll never be in a position where you’ve just spent $68,000,000 and are still groping in the dark for answers. Not only that, but you’ll defeat childhood obesity naturally, without resorting to pills, shots, and special diets to get the job done. What more can you ask?

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne

Of Pull Ups, Childhood Obesity Prevention, and the Future of Democracy in the USA
By Rick Osbourne

Recently I saw a documentary movie in which an extraordinary old British gent contended that democracy is still the most revolutionary concept that the human race has ever encountered. He proceeded to observe that despotic governments manipulate and control their people by keeping them fearful, demoralized, and in debt.

Than he added, “Demoralized people don’t vote, they don’t take responsibility for themselves, and they don’t maintain their right to a political democracy,” he said. “You see it takes strong, healthy, resilient, self reliant, and self confident people to form and to maintain a democracy. Strong people are much harder to control than demoralized people.” I found myself wanting to stand up in the audience in order to shout YES!!!!

OPYOW and Rugged Individualism

In that light I’d like to make the following comments about Operation Pull Your Own Weight, a program primarily focused on childhood obesity prevention, and on developing strong, resilient, self reliant kids who refuse to drink from the mass produced, conventional fountains of indoctrination. Above all else, these kids think for themselves.

There are those who have embraced OPYOW because of its ruggedly individualistic connotations, and I don’t deny that rugged individualism is part of its appeal. We actively applaud strength, resilience, self-reliance, and personal responsibility taking behaviors. They are key components of being human in the fullest sense.

Social Darwinism VS Enlightened Self Interest

On the other hand, OPYOW is actively opposed to Social Darwinism, a theory that endorses a self centered, me first, to hell with you, survival of the fittest orientation to human existence. That may be part of American folklore, but in real life, self centered individualism all by itself is psychologically alienating and socially counterproductive.

Instead OPYOW favors enlightened self interest, a concept that takes the position “what’s good for my family is good for me. And what’s good for my neighborhood is good for my family. And what’s good for my city, county, state, nation, world, is good for my neighborhood, my family, and me.” In the words of some wise old man somewhere, “We’re all in this together.” Failing to understand and to act according to the principal of enlightened self interest undermines democracy.

OPYOW Salutes…

So does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who can fend for themselves, their family, their friends, and maybe even their city, state, nation, world? Absolutely! Does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who refuse the lure of conventional kool-aid and think for themselves? Without a doubt! And does OPYOW salute rugged individuals who use their strength to help strengthen others and help them to become confident, self reliant, yet also humble, mutually respectful, and therefore fully human? Yeseree Bob.

Egalitarianism, mutual respect, quiet self confidence, and enlightened self interest are at the heart of democracy and Operation Pull Your Own Weight. Hats off to both.

Rick Osbourne is a Chicago based writer who currently serves as Executive Director of Operation Pull Your Own Weight, an informational web site that's dedicated to naturally immunizing kids against obesity for a lifetime without pills, shots, or special diets.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rick_Osbourne

Symptoms of Child Obesity
By Milos Pesic

Obesity is considered the most common dietary crisis faced by a lot of Americans today. Both infants and children are not exempted from this grave health threat. This condition often happen when they are taking more calories than their small bodies can use. Like adults, this puts them in a very high risk of other health complications. Prevention and early detection is highly advised, since parents are mainly responsible for their child’s health. So what are the symptoms of child obesity?

Although most people consider a fat child cute, parents should pay more close attention to their child’s weight. There are some signs that can help you detect if your child is in danger of obesity. It can usually be determined by measuring the height and weight. A child is considered obese of his/her weight is significantly over the ideal weight for his/her age and height. The most common symptoms of child obesity include disproportionate appearance of facial features, adiposity in the breast area among boys, unusually large abdomen and exceptionally small external genitals for males. Puberty may also occur earlier in obese children.

For most obese people, the cause of their disorder can be traced back to their childhood. Obesity is expected to persist through life. That is why early detection and therapy of obesity in children is the best preventive solution in blocking its progression into adulthood. Close attention to the symptoms of child obesity would really help in the intervention and treatment of the child.

It is therefore a huge responsibility for parents to constantly monitor symptoms of child obesity, especially if their child is visibly overweight. Parents should never neglect to scrutinize the eating habits of their children. Early cure could prevent the child from developing other medical complications such as cardiovascular diseases and diabetes.

It is also important to include every member in the family to participate in treating an obese child. The support and reassurances of loved ones would make it easier for the child to deal with his/her weight problems. If you have a close relative suffering from obesity, ignoring the problem or unrepentantly teasing them will not solve the problem in any way. Early intervention is needed, not only solely directed to the child but to the parents as well. Since more than anybody else, parents should be aware of the food intake and eating attitude of the child. A long-term program is highly advised to rehabilitate both the parents and the child. This is not just the burden if the child to carry, but a family problem that needs attention and quick action.

Milos Pesic is an expert in the field of Weight Loss and Obesity and runs a highly popular and comprehensive Obesity web site.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Milos_Pesic

Is Your Child Showing Symptoms of Obesity?
By Milos Pesic

Obesity is a health condition wherein body fat is increased and unused, reaching a dangerous point in a person’s health. This happens when the energy from food intake is greater than its use. This causes the body to store energy as fat.

There are a number of factors that cause obesity. Some of which include a genetic predisposition, an underlying illness, eating disorders, medications, poor mental health, lack of sleep, etc. Obesity causes quite a lot of damage considering the number of related diseases that are brought on by this health condition. To make matters worse, obesity incidences has increased that it is now considered a global threat. The rates of child obesity incidences have, in fact, tripled in the United States since 1997. As a response, we’ve tried to combat obesity with diets, exercise, behavior modification, surgery and more recently, drug therapy.

However, nothing beats prevention by a long shot. Its like building a good defense system. The goal is to prevent obesity, specifically child obesity from reaching into adulthood. If you’re your child is showing symptoms of child obesity have your child diagnosed as early as possible. Early detection of the symptoms of child obesity will yield better results because the longer bad habits are allowed, the harder it is to remove them.

Understand that the symptoms of child obesity may include asthma, type 2 diabetes, heart problems, increased blood pressure, increased cholesterol level, sleep apnea, bone and joint problems and psychological problems. Factors that contribute to the symptoms of child obesity are excessive television watching, minimum to no exercise and excessive eating especially of high-calorie and high-fat foods. Obesity cannot be diagnosed through one test. If your child is up for diagnosis, the child’s Body Mass Index shall me measured, as well as his waist circumference, forms or fat and other assessments. A child can be considered ‘medically obese’ when the child’s weight have posed health risks such as those stated before. You can determine the degree to which the child’s obesity has reached by calculating the child’s Body Mass Index (BMI). Just multiply the child’s weight in kilograms by the square of his height in meters as shown: BMI=kg/m2. The resulting number should be compared to the appropriate age percentile.

Remember that an overweight child can be at risk of becoming obese. If the symptoms of child obesity are quite obvious, take action and muster both yours and your child’s courage to fight the condition before it worsens. Life is much too important.

Milos Pesic is an expert in the field of Weight Loss and Obesity and runs a highly popular and comprehensive Obesity web site.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Milos_Pesic






Treating Obesity with Light Therapy


Since the time when obesity was revealed to have such major health problems, many strategies have merged to counter the problem. The core treatment to counter obesity is an increase in exercise and a low-energy diet. There is approximately an average of 8% weight loss. However, the response to dieting and exercise vary. A simple diet change may be effective to one person but a drug therapy may be more effective to another. To determine a suitable therapy for obesity, you must begin with the simplest and move on to more intense treatments if necessary. The following is a short account of treating obesity with light therapy.

The first step to obesity therapy is counseling to determine a diet and exercise regimen and setting a realistic weight loss goal.

Treating obesity with light therapy is a simple intervention to lose weight. It is a treatment of restricted diet or regular exercise or better yet a combination of both.

The diet must consist of calories fewer than your normal intake. Take in well-balanced meals in appropriate servings, not large ones. Eat foods with a high fiber content such as raw vegetables and fresh fruits. Whole grains are good but be careful in choosing them. Rice is not advisable due to its high-calorie and low-fiber content. Lessen the intake of meat and avoid fatty meat. Do not choose fried dishes. Choose foods that are baked, broiled or steamed. Fast food is not advisable. Avoid soft drinks and high fat desserts such as regular ice cream, chips and the like. Be careful in choosing low-fat products, they may just cause you gain weight. Organic and fresh is better. Keep in mine that you require a light, lean and low-fat meal.

Exercise is important. Treating obesity with light therapy is better accomplished with regular exercise. Exercise will burn the excess fat and help maintain a healthy weight. It also contribute to good mental health. Begin with changing travel modes. If your destination is near enough, brisk walk or ride a bike instead of driving. Take the stairs instead of using escalators and elevators. Exercise for at least 20 minutes at 4 to 5 times a week. Taking up a sport would do you good. The important thing is to exercise no matter how small you start with. Its already a good start by treating obesity with light therapy.

Patience and faith is important to battling obesity. If treating obesity with light therapy does not result to a healthy weight and good overall health at the beginning, be patient and have faith. Giving up will not bring you anywhere. You must believe in yourself that you can achieve your goal .

Milos Pesic is an expert in the field of Weight Loss and Obesity.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Milos_Pesic

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Television Causing Child Obesity
By Milos Pesic Platinum Quality Author


So much has changed since the boost of technology. Some years ago, kids played out in the sun all day, running or climbing a huge tree. Today, kids are play in virtual grounds through technology. The television is one of the most famous past-times of the youth. Since its invention our eyes have become glued to it most of the time. This is the lifestyle we have created and introduced the youth to whether directly or not, allowing it to over power us. We have also allowed health problems to continue, to worsen as the boob-tube lifestyle prevails. The question at hand is why the television is causing child obesity.

Obesity is a form of malnutrition wherein energy intake from food is stored as fat because its unused. Since a 1997 study, the incidence of child obesity has tripled, exceeding rates of the incidence adult obesity. It seems as if we’ve bred obesity from the home and we observed that indeed the television is causing child obesity. To become overweight or more importantly, obese is due (but not solely) to minimal physical activity which causes the body to store excess energy as fat. Television brought out the couch potato and this is the lifestyle many children and adolescents know of. Many children sit for hours watching so that’s why that television is causing child obesity. By becoming an audience to a television show, a person’s attention is directed to it so much that nothing else is done besides sitting, staring and maybe the occasional snack. Sometimes, we reach a point of excessive eating. Excessive eating combined with inactivity is very unhealthy. Energy converted from food should be consumed. It must be used up through physical exertion. An overweight child who devotes most of his free time to the television is victim to obesity as oftentimes the television is causing child obesity.

Although there are other factors that contribute to child obesity, the television is one of the factors that originate from home. It can be controlled and prevented. If a child is indeed, obese or on the verge of obesity, encourage the child to do more physical activities such as walking and playing. Let him stay away from the tube as too much television is causing child obesity. A sport (that requires high physical activity) may do better. Lessen the child’s time in front of the television. Explaining to the child and the family why the television is causing child obesity may help. It is also important to consider and address obesity as a health problem and not a problem of appearance. Encourage the family to be more involved and active with the child. We can prevent and stop obesity.

Milos Pesic is an expert in the field of Weight Loss and Obesity and runs a highly popular and comprehensive Obesity web site. For more articles and resources on Obesity and Weight Loss related topics, symptoms and treatments visit his site at:

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Milos_Pesic


Gastric Bypass - The Advantages of Laparoscopic Surgery
By Donald Saunders Platinum Quality Author


Gastric bypass is the most frequently undertaken operation for weight loss in the United States with about 140,000 surgeries being carried out every year. With a history dating back over 50 years, hundreds of surgeons have grown up with gastric bypass surgery and have developed a very good understanding of its benefits and risks.

Gastric bypass surgery is the final option when other types of dieting and weight loss have been unsuccessful and where you are considerably overweight. This normally means that you have a body mass index (BMI) greater than 40, or greater than 35 with an accompanying condition which increases the risk of disability or premature death. Such conditions would include heart disease, obstructive sleep apnea, hypertension and liver disease amongst others. In its simplest form, this equates to being some 100 pounds more than your ideal weight.

The principle behind the gastric bypass procedure is quite simply to lower the size of the stomach and to bypass the larger part of the stomach, as well as part of the intestine, constraining your ability to eat excessively and also reducing the body's absorption of the food that you do eat.

Despite the fact that open gastric bypass procedures are still commonly undertaken a growing number of surgeons are moving to the laparoscopic approach and, though this takes considerable training and expertise on the part of the surgeon, there are a variety of advantages to this approach. Here are just some:

1. Because patients are up and about very quickly following surgery there is a lower risk of pneumonia, blood clots, bed sores and other complications generally associated with immobility.

2. This type of surgery allows for greater precision because the procedure is done under magnification and surgeons can observe details not visible during traditional open surgery.

3. As the laprascopic procedure is quicker than open surgery the patient spends less time in the operating theatre and needs less anesthesia, bringing about fewer anesthesia-related complications.

4. This type of surgery permits you to go back to work in a relatively short timescale, normally as little as one week although it is recommended that patients do not go back to work for around two weeks to be on the safe side.

5. Patients experience very much less post-operative pain and what little pain there is requires only mild painkillers like codeine and paracetamol.

6. As commonly only 5 short incisions are made during this form of procedure the time that it takes to heal following surgery is considerably reduced, as is the possibility of infection and of the complications of a subsequent hernia.

Gastric bypass produces a significant improvement in the quality of life for patients and also has the further benefit of improving, or in many cases of curing, headache, venous status disease, arthritis, heartburn, diabetes and other disorders.

The fact that the procedure itself can now be done so much more easily and leave patients quite pain free and have them on their feet rapidly means that a growing number of people are likely to opt for gastric bypass surgery and enjoy a happier and healthier lifestyle.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders


When Does Being Overweight Turn Into Obesity?
By Donald Saunders Platinum Quality Author

Everybody is familiar with the term overweight and most of us will have experienced being overweight. Indeed, many of us will be more or less permanently overweight and simply live with it. But what is the difference between being overweight and being clinically obese?

Well the simple answer would be to say that being obese is nothing more than being very overweight. In other words, it's simply a matter of degree. Unfortunately, this answer misses the central issue of obesity.

Putting on a few pounds won't do you any real harm and, apart from the fact that your pants may feel a little tight and you may be less than happy with the way you look, there are even some people who believe that carrying a little extra weight might actually be good for you. Indeed, there are some studies that show that death rates are slightly lower amongst individuals who are slightly overweight, although there is considerable debate about whether or not this is actually related to weight or results from other factors which are more often seen in people who are overweight.

Once your weight passes a certain level though, so that you are now carrying sufficient extra weight to be classed as being obese, the scales tip and you begin to run the risk of developing a series of health problems as a result of your excess weight. Indeed, if your weight continues to climb, these health problems can literally become life-threatening and your obesity will then be classed as morbid obesity.

This is all very well, but how do you know whether you're simply overweight or obese?

The main measure of obesity was developed by a Belgian statistician and anthropometrist named Adolphe Quetelet nearly one hundred and fifty years ago and is referred to as the measurement of body mass index, or BMI. In simple terms your BMI is calculated by dividing your weight in kilograms by the square of your height in metres. So, if you are 1.7 metres tall and weigh 70 kilograms your BMI would be 24.2 [70 ÷ (1.7x1.7)].

A BMI of between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered to be normal. Between 25.0 and 29.9 you would be classed as being overweight. Once you reach a BMI of 30 you are considered to be obese and, if your BMI reaches or exceeds 40 you are morbidly obese.

BMI is designed as a general guide but there are circumstances in which it is possible to have a BMI of less than 30 and still be clinically obese and indeed to have a BMI of more than 30 and not to be classed as being obese. A lean but muscular individual could, for example, have a BMI of over 30 but, in this case, the excess weight would be provided by muscle rather than by fat.

As a result, where your weigh becomes a concern and obesity a possible issue, further more accurate tests should be carried out by your doctor to determine whether or not your are clinically obese.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders

An Obese Person Simply Eats Too Much
By Donald Saunders Platinum Quality Author


If you belong to the school of thought that believes that there is no excuse for obesity and that an obese person is simply someone who eats too much and doesn't take enough exercise, then think again. While it is true that overeating combined with a sedentary lifestyle can cause obesity, it is certainly not the only cause.

Although not well understood at this time, there is believed to a genetic factor which can pre-dispose certain individuals to obesity. For example, some forms of the genes which control such things as appetite and metabolism are thought to contribute to obesity when combined with certain environmental conditions.

In addition, there are a number of genetic disorders which can result in obesity. Prader-Willi syndrome for example, named after Andrea Prader and Heinrich Willi and first described in 1956, is a genetic condition in which, amongst other things, sufferers have an insatiable appetite and accumulate excessive fat, especially within the central portion of the body.

Underlying illness can also result in weight gain and obesity. Perhaps the best know, but not the only, illness that frequently leads to obesity is hypothyroidism, in which the thyroid gland produces too little thyroid hormone. Although the condition itself produces only mild weight gain, combined with suitable environmental conditions, this can easily develop in a very substantial increase in weight.

Medication can also cause weight gain. The list of medications which can produce weight gain is very long but one class of drugs that is causing particular concern and has attracted the attention of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the new, or second generation, class of atypical antipsychotics which can have a marked effect on the metabolism.

There are also a number of specific eating disorders which will cause obesity, such as binge eating disorder. Binge eating disorder is a psychiatric disorder (and an element of bulimia nervosa) in which, as its name suggests, sufferers are unable to control their eating and frequently intersperse binge eating into a normal eating pattern.

Certain diets can also result in obesity without the individual realizing that it is the diet that is causing the problem. In other words this is not a case of simply eating too much, but of eating the wrong type of food. In some individuals for example certain foods will result in an unusually high level of blood sugar for a short time immediately after they have eaten.

Dieting itself can also lead to obesity. The fact of the matter is that most diets fail and we are seeing an increasing number of people who spend a substantial proportion of their lives moving from one diet to the next in an attempt to lose weight. What happens here is that they usually lose weight while they are on a diet but then regain it, plus a bit extra, each time they come off a diet. As they move on and off a variety of diets their weight cycles up and down, but the underlying trend is for their weight to increase over time, eventually resulting in obesity.

These are just some of causes of obesity, other than simple overeating and a lack of exercise, and many of these causes are outside of the control of the individuals concerned or their ability to control the situation is very limited.

So, the next time you see an obese person you might be right in saying that they have caused their own problem, but you might equally be wrong in jumping to this conclusion.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders


Should Obesity Be Included As a Risk Factor For Asthma?
By Donald Saunders Platinum Quality Author


It is well known that obesity places you at risk of developing problems from such things as diabetes, sleep apnea, cardiovascular disease, stroke and arthritis, but it is now being suggested that asthma should also be added to this list.

As the problem of obesity has grown alarmingly in recent years, with about 65 percent of the US population now being classed as either overweight or obese, so too has the problem of asthma. Asthma, which results in recurrent wheezing, coughing and hypersensitivity to allergies, affects about 20 million Americans, including a staggering 9 million children.

So could the growing problem of asthma be linked to the rise in obesity?

In a recent study, which looked at the records of more than 330,000 patients in the US, Canada and Europe, it was found that as an individual's body mass index (BMI) passed 25 (the threshold for being overweight) so his or her chances of developing asthma increased by 50 percent. The study also found that as weight continued to increase so too did the risk of developing asthma.

The study also showed that this risk seemed to be equally distributed between both men and women and that there was no foundation for the previously held belief that there might be a connection between obesity and asthma in women but not in men.

Now if you are overweight and are experiencing breathing problems you should not immediately leap to the conclusion that you have asthma. Breathing problems can arise with increasing weight as your lung volume is effectively reduced, your chest wall is restricted or indeed for a variety of other reasons. However, if you are experiencing problems you should of course have these checked out by your doctor and should not be surprised if this does indeed turn out to be asthma.

Asthma is a chronic and incurable, but normally controllable, condition which produces an inflammation and narrowing of the airways leading to and from the lungs. What is not clear at this stage however is whether being overweight can actually cause asthma. Further research will be required but the best guess at the moment is that a substantial proportion of the population is in fact suffering from mild and undiagnosed asthma and that an increase in weight aggravates the condition and turns a mild case of asthma into severe asthma.

One the other side of coin the good news is that losing weigh could potentially reduce the problem significantly.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders


Could Pure Fruit Juice Help To Lower Obesity In Children?
By Donald Saunders

There has been a general belief for a long time that giving young children pure fruit juice might make them overweight and thus could be contributing to some degree to the current dramatic rise in childhood obesity.

This debate has been going on for some time largely because of the inconsistency in the data from various studies, and it was not until very recently that the results of a study involving 3,618 children from 2 and 11 years of age revealed the truth about drinking pure fruit juice.

There was a wide variation in the consumption of pure fruit juice amongst the children in the study from children who consumed almost none at all to those who consumed an average of about 12 ounces or more daily. The average consumption amongst the children was just over 4 ounces a day, which is consistent with the daily amount recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The results of the study showed that there was no evidence that children who drank pure fruit juice were overweight as a result, or that drinking fruit juice put them at risk of becoming overweight. Indeed, the opposite was shown to be true with children in the 2 to 3 age group for example, who consumed the most fruit juice, being nearly three times less likely to be overweight than children in the same age group who did not drink pure fruit juice.

More interestingly though, the study also revealed that children who consumed pure fruit juice ate less total fat, saturated fats and added fats as well as less sugar and sodium. These children also ate more whole fruit and had higher intakes of a range of key minerals and vitamins including iron, magnesium, potassium, vitamin B6 and vitamin C.

So, contrary to popular belief, rather than putting children at risk from gaining weight, pure fruit juice would appear to help in maintaining children's weight at the correct level and also provides them the necessary nutrients, vitamins and minerals for strong and healthy growth.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Donald_Saunders