• 61°
Hartselle Enquirer

Obesity rate is too high

You had to look far and wide to find an Alabamian of any age who had a roll of fat around his or her waist 65 years ago. It wasn’t because they refused to eat or limited their diet to low-fat foods. As a general rule, foods were fried, cooked and baked with lard, a byproduct of pork fat.

In that era the state was a patchwork of small family farms, which required endless labor. In order to be self-sufficient, farm folks toiled from sunup to sundown to get their work done. It didn’t matter what or how much food they ate at breakfast, lunch or dinner, they were going to burn off all of the calories before the next meal.

My, how things have changed. Farms are few and far between now and those remaining require little manual labor. As a matter of fact, few jobs remain that require a lot of calorie burn. Thus, it’s easy to sit down and let the time drift by while watching a favorite TV program or ball game and munching on snacks.

The outcome of a sedentary lifestyle is not a pretty sight. Our country is fighting an epidemic of adult obesity and Alabama is listed among the leaders.

Just 17 years ago, Mississippi had the highest rate of adult obesity in the U.S. at 19.4 percent. Today, the state with the lowest rate had a higher rate than Mississippi did in 1995 – Colorado at 20.7 percent.

Alabama, at 32 percent, has the fourth-highest rate of adult obesity in the nation. It also is fourth-highest in diabetes, fifth-highest in rate of physical activity and the nation’s leader in the number of people with high blood pressure.

The epidemic is not limited to adults either. In Jefferson County, for example, 22 percent of third graders are overweight or obese.

Fortunately, efforts are underway by health professionals and weight management specialists to stem the tide. In the meantime, a bit to good advice is to eat less and exercise more.

 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Home away from home: Ukrainian exchange student to graduate from Hartselle High School  

Breaking News

Tornadoes hit Hartselle, Lacey’s Spring; one dead

Danville

One killed, damage reported in overnight storms

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Gallery: Hartselle Drama presents Shrek the Musical

At a Glance

Let the games begin: Parks and Rec to hold Community Games this summer  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

OWO registration opens April 3

Editor's picks

HOSA students win big at state level  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle corn grower named state winner of national yield contest  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

‘Message of acceptance’: Hartselle High brings Shrek, his friends and tormentors to stage

Hartselle

HACC slates annual meeting for April 28

Breaking News

Hartselle woman charged with capital murder in stabbing death of 8-year-old son

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

UPDATE: 8-year-old boy killed, man injured in Hartselle stabbing

Breaking News

Hartselle stabbing leaves one dead, one injured

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Vote now through April 17 for Hartselle’s Best of the Best

Hartselle

Historical society to present ‘Lost Treasures’ event  

Hartselle

Hartselle Historical Society receives grant for video campaign 

Falkville

Double-homicide defendant ‘heard voices in his head’ 

Hartselle

Riding for a reason: Hartselle man takes 611-mile journey to raise awareness of friend’s kidney disease  

Morgan County

Veteran journalist new Morgan communications director 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle man sentenced to 10 years behind bars after killing dog  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

All in a name: Group wants to rename Hartselle street for local war hero instead of disgraced French official

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Small town, big pride: Priceville supports Bulldogs through record-breaking year

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Raising queen bees becomes business for Hartselle father-daughter duo

Falkville

Area schools participate in Read Across America

x