Being overweight or obese 'costs you 10 years'
Comment From Dean Piazza - Your Online Personal Trainer :
This article below is a good wake up call to people who seriously need to lose weight.
Even though you may be able to extend your lifespan by approx 10 years through regular exercise and good nutrition they also forgot to mention the quality of life you have when you are fit and healthy.
Lets take a look at a few of these
* Confidence - Being fit and healty gives you confidence to achieve things in life whether they be business or personal related
* This confidence leads to increased happiness and self worth within yourself
* It gives you more energy each day and even though you still get tired - yopu can bounce back each day
with enthusiasm and a good attitude
* It reduces your need for medication for such things as high blood pressure, depression, high cholesterol, anxiety and the list goes on. The long term risk to your body and mind for using these medications is unproven but common sense tells us it may fix one problem but it will definately cause another problem down the track.
* Its an investment in your health - too much emphasis is given on wealth investment and people forget about health!
PEOPLE who are overweight or obese are lopping up to a decade off their lives, a major international study shows.
British researchers have pulled together studies encompassing almost a million people, including Australians, to look at how a person's Body Mass Index (BMI) can be a predictor of early death.
Almost 70,000 of the test subjects died during the study, and the fewest of these came from the group with a healthy body shape (BMI of 22.5 to 25).
At the other end of the scale, people with a BMI indicating they were overweight (30 - 35 BMI) were shown to have died up to four years earlier than expected.
Those in the obese category (40 - 45 BMI) reduced their survival by eight to ten years, the same as life-long smokers.
"It's a pretty striking paper in terms of how important weight is," CSIRO leader in human nutrition Dr Peter Clifton said in response to the research.
"And as people are getting fatter even earlier, then this is only going to increase ... this (study) is probably under-representing what is really happening."
A person's BMI rating is a calculation which takes in their weight and height. For example, a person who is 170cm tall and who weighs 70kg has a BMI of 24.2 - within the healthy range.
If the same person weighed 100kg then their BMI would be 34.6 - in the range considered overweight. Add a few more kilograms to 120kg (BMI of 41.5) and they're obese.
The study also found that with every five point increase in BMI, the person increased their chance of dying during the study by 30 per cent.
The major causes of death were vascular and kidney problems such as heart attack or diabetes.
Dr Clifton said the findings showed the importance of maintaining a healthy weight throughout life, but particularly the danger posed by gaining weight early in life.
"The risk (of premature death) is even stronger because you're exposed to being fat even longer," he said.
"When you get to age 25, when you start to gain weight, you need to really work hard to stop gaining that weight."
smh.com.au