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Obesity: Consequences &Costs Healthy Kids Collaborative Policy Summit March 28, 2012 . David N. Collier, MD, PhD, FAAP Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Family Medicine and Kinesiology Director, Pediatric Healthy Weight Research and Treatment Center. Objectives. Define obesity
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Obesity: Consequences &CostsHealthy Kids Collaborative Policy SummitMarch 28, 2012 David N. Collier, MD, PhD, FAAP Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Family Medicine and Kinesiology Director, Pediatric Healthy Weight Research and Treatment Center
Objectives • Define obesity • Recognize common medical problems associated with obesity • Discuss costs to employers and society
How is Obesity Defined? Body Mass Index (BMI) • Calculated from height and weight • wt in kg/(ht in m)2 • 2005 US Preventive Services Task Force: • “Acceptable measure for identifying children and adolescents with excess weight.” • Feasible and reliable • Correlates with directly measured % body fat • Tracks with adult obesity measures
Definition of Obesity: Adults • Body mass index (BMI) • Weight (kg)/ [height (m)]2 • Adult criteria (WHO and NIH) • < 18.5 kg/m2 underweight • 18.5 < 25 normal weight • 25 < 30 overweight • > 30 obese • > 40 extreme obesity
Relative Risk of Death vs. BMI * * Calle EE et al NEJM 1999;341: 1097-1105 * * *
Body Mass Index and Age Adjusted Lifetime Relative Risk of Type 2 Diabetes (♀)Colditz et al. Am J Epidemiol 1990;132:501-513 Relative Risk 66% 32% 4.5%
Definition of Obesity: Children • Body mass index (BMI) • Weight (kg)/ [height (m)]2 • Age and gender specific norms (CDC) • Definitions: • BMI < 5th percentile: Underweight • BMI > 5th but < 85th ‘tile Healthy Weight • BMI > 85th but < 95th ‘tile Overweight • BMI > 95th Obese • BMI ≥ 99 Obese with increased risk
Prevalence of Obesity by Era/Age(data from various NHES and NHANES, BMI ≥ 95th tile)
Prevalence of Overweight, Obesity and Extreme Obesity (NHANES 2003-2004 vs. Eastern NC)
Tracking BMI-for-Age from Birth to 18 Years with Percent of Overweight Children who Are Obese at Age 25 Whitaker et al. NEJM:1997;337:869-873
Years of Life Lost as a Function of BMI at Age 20 (Fontaine KR JAMA 2003;289:187-93) Years Expected Life Lost
Risks related to childhood obesity Speiser PW et a.l J Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87 • Endocrine • Cardiovascular • Respiratory • Visceral • Orthopedic • Renal • Dermatologic • Neurologic • Malignancies • Psycho-social
Endocrine risks • Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus • 30-50% of all new pediatric cases • Onset a early as 2 years of age • Impending epidemic in US? • 33% of boys born in 2000 • 39% of girls born in 2000 • Higher in certain populations • Hispanic, Native American, Asian American • 60-80 lifetime prevalence in certain populations • eNC = 66% - 78%??? • Poly Cystic Ovary Syndrome
Cardiovascular Risks related to childhood obesitySpeiser PW et a.l J Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87 • Hypercholesterolemia • Obesity #1 cause childhood dyslipidemias • Bogalusa Heart Study • Plaque and fatty streak formation begins in childhood • Extent of plaque varies with: • BMI • blood pressure • lipid profile
Cardiovascular Risks related to childhood obesity (Speiser PW et a.l J Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87) • Hypertension • Obesity #1 cause of childhood hypertension • Cardiomyopathy • Increased blood volume and pressure requires heart to work harder • Increased work induces fibrous hypertrophy • Left ventricle doesn’t fill or pump as well • Increased 02 requirement • Adipositas cordis • Trans-differentiation of cardiac myocytes into adipocytes
45% of Obese Adolescents Already Have Impaired Vascular Reactivity (early CAD) Obese
Respiratory risks related to childhood obesity (Speiser PW et a.l J Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87) • Asthma • Higher prevalence • More severe in obese children • Harder to ventilate/treat obese child • Obstructive sleep apnea • Obese child ≈ 6 x as likely to suffer • 90% prevalence in obese adolescents with habitual snoring • Intermittent airway collapse • Hypoxia and hypercapnea • Pulmonary artery hypertension • Right ventricular hypertrophy • Behavioral problems • Inattentiveness/hyperactivity • Irreversible cognitive defects • School failure • Secondary nocturnal enuresis Images from S. Boag @ www.path.gueensu.ca
Visceral risks related to childhood obesity (Speiser PW et a.l J Clin. Endo. & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87) • Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease • Excessive caloric intake stored as fat in liver • 50% of obese children have radiographic evidence • 15% with elevated transaminases • 15% will progress to cirrhosis and liver failure • Obesity related NAFLD most common childhood liver disease • Gall bladder disease • Related to obesity but mechanism not clear • Can be precipitated by rapid weight loss
Orthopedic risks related to childhood obesity (Speiser PW et a.l J Clin Endo & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87) • Slipped capital femoral epiphysis • Tibia vara (Blount’s disease) • Osteoarthritis • Scoliosis • Spondylolisthesis • Genu valgus • Pes planus
Walking-frontal plane (McMillan et al, Pediatr Phys Ther 2009; 21:187–193) HIP KNEE ANKLE
Risks related to childhood obesity Speiser PW et a.l J Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2005;90:1871-87 • Endocrine • Cardiovascular • Respiratory • Visceral • Orthopedic • Renal • Dermatologic • Neurologic • Malignancies • Psycho-social
Obesity: the Most Expensive Risk Factor for North Carolina in 2006 “Tipping the Scales:” by Chenowith and Associates for Be Active North Carolina 2008 • $ 33 million youth medical costs • $ 2.8 billion adult medical costs • $960 million adult Rx drug costs • $ 11.8 billion lost productivity costs • $28,619 cost by mid career • $250,000 cost by retirement • 3.05% drop in OW/OB prevalence could: • Potentially save $ 3 billion (2007-2011) • Fund 68,000 full time jobs in North Carolina
Aggregate Costs Associated with Selected Risk Factors: North Carolina 2006“Tipping the Scales:” by Chenowith and Associates for Be Active North Carolina 2008
Aggregate medical spending attributable to overweight and obesity (Runge CF. Diabetes 2007;56:2668)
Energy Balance:Energy intake = Energy expenditure Food and Beverage Intake Physical Activity Energy Intake Energy Expenditure
Culture/Society Media/Govt./Industry Community School/Peers Family/Home Child Physical Activity Food and Beverage Intake Energy Expenditure Energy Intake Ecological Systems Theory ModelDavison KK, Birch LL Obes Rev 2001;2:159-71
A Public Health Framework to Prevent and Control Overweight and Obesity • Food and BeverageIndustry • Agriculture • Education • Media • Government • Public Health Systems • Healthcare Industry • Business and Workers • Land Use and Transportation • Leisure and Recreation • Community- and Faith-based Organizations • Foundations and Other Funders Social Norms and Values • Home and Family • School • Community • Work Site • Healthcare Sectors of Influence Behavioral Settings • Genetics • Psychosocial • Other Personal Factors Individual Factors Food and Beverage Intake Physical Activity Energy Expenditure Energy Intake Energy Balance Note: Adapted from “Preventing Childhood Obesity.” Institute of Medicine, 2005. Prevention of Overweight and Obesity Among Children, Adolescents, and Adults
Contact Information • David N. Collier, MD, PhD, FAAP • ECU pediatric Healthy Weight Research and Treatment Center • Brody School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics • collierd@ecu.edu • www.pedsweightcenter.ecu.edu • 252-744-3538 • Referrals: • Joy Aycock @ 252 744-3538