The Role of Obesity
By: The Icon Diet Rearder
You would have to be a hermit not to know about the dramatic
rise of obesity levels in North America. Health issues have been
plastered around the media non stop for the better part of the
last five years. The problem is that for the most part the
message has been falling short of its mark. There are more obese
people in 2004 then there were in 2003. The number of diet
related health complications is growing and children are
ballooning at a rate comparable to their adult counterparts. On
the flip side, the health industry has been showing strong signs
of growth, with one in four women and one in five men on a diet
at any given time. While times have been tight financially,
people have been opening up their wallets in record numbers to
by fitness products and gym memberships.
So the bottom line is that while people are actively aware of
health and fitness concerns, and are spending more then ever
before on products and services to battle poor fitness, North
America as a whole is getting fatter. It seems like a
contradiction but it is the truth none the less. For one thing,
the most people try to fix their health and then give up because
it is too challenging. Often they lack the support from friends
and family or even the proper skill set to be successful.
However, that being said, North America is in a bad way when it
comes to health. We are a society that allows itself to binge to
a point where obesity is considered an epidemic. Historically
epidemics are things that rage outside of the ready control of
human kind. When we typically think about epidemics we think
about cholera, typhus or even