Health & Fitness

CDC Obesity Map Shows Colorado's Low Overweight Population

The Centers for Disease Control released data about obesity rates in every state as self-reported in 2017.

ACROSS COLORADO – The green square in the middle of the Centers for Disease Control's new obesity maps tells the story. Colorado is one of the states with the very lowest prevalence of obesity in America.

Colorado had the lowest reported obesity rate, at 22.6 percent, while West Virginia had the highest at 38.1 percent in the CDC's newest data released this week.

In 2017, seven states reported an adult obesity prevalence at or above 35 percent and the CDC said adult obesity across the country “remains high.” Five years earlier, in 2012, no state in the nation had a rate more than 35 percent.

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Adult obesity also differs by race, ethnicity and education, the CDC notes. According to the data, adults without a high school degree had the highest prevalence of obesity at 35.6 percent while college graduates had the lowest prevalence of obesity at 22.7 percent. Discussing the disparities in adult obesity based on race, the CDC said black Americans had a 39 percent prevalence of obesity, hispanics had a 32.4 percent prevalence while white Americans had the lowest obesity prevalence at 29.3 percent.

All states had more than 20 percent of adults with obesity. Obesity prevalence was highest in the South and the Midwest and lowest in the Northeast and the West.

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Other than Colorado, Hawaii (less obvious on the CDC map) was the second of three states with the lowest obesity prevalence of between 20 to less than 25 percent. D.C. also had the same prevalence.

The data comes from an ongoing telephone survey conducted by the CDC and state health officials. The CDC also says the adult obesity data is self-reported.

“Adults with obesity are at an increased risk for many serious health conditions such as heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, some cancers, poorer mental health, and more,” the CDC says. “Children with obesity are more likely to become adults with obesity. Obesity costs the United States health care system over $147 billion a year. In addition, research has shown that obesity affects work productivity and military readiness.”

Read more via the CDC.

Image via Centers for Disease Control

By Feroze Dhanoa, Patch National Staff


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