
The human cost in terms of compromised and ruined lives from chronic diseases like heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes is obvious.
What about the economic cost? Let's consider just one small element of the big picture: the cost of drugs to treat type 2 diabetes, a condition closely tied to obesity.
Projections are that over the next decade, drug costs for treatment of diabetes in the United States will escalate from $18 billion to possibly as high as $25 billion.
Looks bleak, but what if we tried to turn things around? A recent research study suggests that by cutting back modestly in caloric intake, we could reduce the incidence of obesity in the United States substantially.
A reduction of just 100 calories per day per adult over the next four years would pay big dividends. Here's the math: 100 calories per day times 365 days times four years equals 146,000 saved calories. At 3,500 calories per pound of stored body fat, this equates to 146,000 divided by 3,500 equals 41.7 pounds of lost fat. That
amount of fat loss was estimated to cut our incidence of overweight and obesity nearly in half.
But that's only part of the story. This reduction in body fatness was projected to lead to 1.7 million fewer diagnoses of heart disease, 1.5 million fewer diagnoses of type 2 diabetes and a savings of $58 billion in health care costs.
The result was many noteworthy changes, led by a huge decrease in obesity. In turn, this has translated in 30 years into — get this — a reduction in heart attack deaths among those 20 to 65 years of age by a whopping 80 percent, and a remarkable 10-year increase in the average lifespan.
When examining the astounding turnaround seen in Finland, can there be any doubt that a change in lifestyle makes a difference? The answer is so obvious it would be laughable if the stakes weren't so high.
The powers that be want to overhaul our health care system. At first, there was talk of the need for increased individual responsibility for one's state of health and the importance of healthy lifestyle practices, and for a brief while I was mildly optimistic. Unfortunately, the agenda soon shifted to health care's big-business interests.



© 2012 Created by Lisa Newton.
You need to be a member of Iowa Avenue to add comments!
Join Iowa Avenue