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we know the human race is in trouble when obesity is a problem in asia

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44283668/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/#.TlfU76jCbTo

more proof that diet/exercise > genes.

BEIJING — On the grounds of the Bodyworks weight loss campus in Beijing, 30 tubby men and women sweat profusely, gasping for air as they pound the treadmills in an exercise room.

They represent a shocking new statistic in the world's most populous country. According to some estimates, a third of China's population — some 429 million — are overweight or obese, prime candidates for heart disease and diabetes.

It is growing fatter faster than any developing nation except Mexico,
with grave implications for the work force and economic growth in the world's second biggest economy.

At the Bodyworks campus, they range in age from 7 to 55 and come from across China. Each pays nearly $5,000 for the six-week program.

For that, they get balanced meals and exercise for six hours each day. The regimen includes weight training, running, yoga and soccer.

"For the first two to three weeks, it was especially hard. I cried on the phone to my parents and told my father, 'I can't make it,'" said Zhang Fang, a 28-year-old employee with China Unicom from northern Shanxi province.

"My mother said: 'If you don't continue, you're finished. You need your health.'"
Story: Healthy obese people may live as long as thin folks

When Zhang joined the camp, she weighed 300 pounds, had high blood pressure and had trouble breathing when she walked. She's lost more than 100 pounds in one year.

"Now I'm a fat person, but at least I'm not a super-sized fat person," Zhang said.

Though most Chinese think a chubby child is a healthy child, society can be less tolerant of overweight adults, who complain of not being able to find jobs.

"I want to give people a good impression when I go for interviews," said Zheng Xiaojie, a 22-year-old university student from far-western Xinjiang, who has lost over 10 pounds in seven weeks. "People feel more comfortable about thinner people."

More acute in big cities
Obesity is most acute in China's biggest cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, where people enjoy higher incomes, eat richer foods and lead more sedentary lifestyles.

"Urban China got richer. It's just gone out and bought itself more food and bought itself cars and couches to sit on while watching TV,"
Paul French, co-author 'Fat China: How Expanding Waistlines are Changing a Nation,' told Reuters.

Mu Ge, the sales manager at Bodyworks, said the most glaring difference between China and other countries "is that the rich people in China are all extremely fat ... (whereas) in other countries, the wealthy are all very thin and beautiful."
Story: Obesity's big fat cost to states: $15 billion per year

"In the U.K., only the poor people will eat junk food, and will therefore be fat," Mu said. "In China, it's the opposite. The more money you have, the fatter you are. It's almost as if it's proof that living standards have improved."

Dressed in an oversized t-shirt that did little to conceal his rotund belly, Liu Chi has lost more than 20 pounds since he first entered Bodyworks six weeks ago and now weighs in at about 200 pounds.

To Liu, his progress represents a new lease on life — one he hopes will include a girlfriend and fewer taunts.

"I had an inferiority complex," said the cherub-faced 20-year-old student from Hebei province. "People will look at me on the streets and ask me: 'How heavy are you?'"

158 percent increase in obesity rate
Ding Zongyi, a professor at the Chinese Medical Doctor Association, who has been studying obesity in China for the past 30 years, said the obesity rate has jumped 158 percent since 1996 to 2006 and is set to rise further.

Even the most conservative assumptions have the rate of change in overweight and obesity in China doubling over the next two decades, Barry Popkin, professor of nutrition at the University of North Carolina, wrote in the July/August 2008 issue of the journal Health Affairs.

Health experts say that the speed with which China is putting on weight is alarming.

"In America and Europe, they had to go through the whole process of inventing supermarkets and processed food," French, the writer, said. "It took stages in the West. The Chinese didn't have to invent the Mars bar. It was given McDonald's, KFC, Tesco and Wal-Mart."

KFC parent Yum Brands Inc. say the Chinese market is its main earnings driver and McDonald's said China has been the fastest-growing market for the firm worldwide in terms of the number of new restaurant openings.

Popkin said in emailed comments that more fried food, consumption of food from animal sources, sugared drinks and too few vegetables have contributed to China's expanding girth.

Although the prevalence of fast food is a major culprit, extra-high amounts of salt, sugar and oil in Chinese cooking is another factor contributing to the sharp rise in obesity.


And while China's obesity rate is still half that in the United States, Britain and Australia, it has led to a worrying rise in chronic non-communicable diseases such as cancer, strokes, heart disease and diabetes.

In a growing number of developed nations, obesity is quickly replacing tobacco as the most important preventable cause of chronic non-communicable diseases, health experts warned.

About 12 percent of children aged 7-18 years old in China are overweight or obese, Popkin said.

The number of people suffering from diabetes has reached 92 million in China, almost 10 percent of its population of 1.3 billion, according to a March 2010 study in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Story: Surgery patient dies as doctors flee hospital fire

Soaring costs
In China, the economic costs of obesity are enormous, Popkin said. An increasingly obese population poses economic problems in terms of treatment costs, paid sick leave, loss of productivity, disability and premature death.

The indirect effect of obesity and obesity-related dietary and physical activity patterns was 3.58 percent of GDP in 2000 and was projected to reach 8.73 percent in 2025, Popkin wrote.

"These estimates do not account for much of the recent rapid increase in the use of and spending for pharmaceutical products, which would make the total costs even higher," he wrote.

Ding said there had been no action taken by the government to address the problem.

"The government pays little attention to obesity partially because many parents and even doctors still lack the awareness to recognize and seriously cope with obesity as a problem," he said.
 
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this is what happens when you are conditioned to eat as much as you can because there might not be a meal tomorrow.
 
I remember an article maybe couple weeks or a month or so back where they considered KFC to be healthy since it's not filled with nasty fillers like cardboard dumplings and whatever crap that they put in their food.
 
I remember an article maybe couple weeks or a month or so back where they considered KFC to be healthy since it's not filled with nasty fillers like cardboard dumplings and whatever crap that they put in their food.


KFC is fine as long as you don't eat a bucket a day. I can't eat North American KFC thoug.
 
Getting closer...

walle3.jpg
 
Excellent - An emerging market for pharmaceutical products! (That is - after the extinction of animal species that will be exploited by the Chinese for "medicinal fat-busting" properties.)

edit: Posting in BBYT fat thread
 
Hell even the place with some of the best beaches the world has is the fattest country in the world now, Australia. 🙁

It's a world issue and one step closer to being fat enough for the aliens to invade and use us as a food source.
 
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So not only are they surpassing us in economics, manufacturing ability, and research papers published, they now take our most proud title, the fattest nation on earth?
 
This seems like USA 100 years ago. The working class was slim. "Fat Cat" described a person's wallet as well as waistline.
 
Being a fatty and not seeing your own penis might be horrible, but it beats the alternative. People in Africa would love to have that obesity problem.
 
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