UNICEF Warns Childhood Obesity Has Surpassed Underweight Worldwide

Obesity has now overtaken underweight as the more common form of malnutrition among children, according to a new UNICEF report. The study, “Feeding Profit: How Food Environments are Failing Children,” reveals that 1 in 10 school-aged children and adolescents — about 188 million — are living with obesity, putting them at risk of serious, life-threatening diseases.

Pratik Pawar wrote for Yahoo:

Obesity in children isn’t just about size; it raises risks for Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and even certain cancers later in life. Starting so young makes the costs even higher. By 2035, being overweight and obesity are expected to drain more than $4 trillion a year globally — about 3 percent of the world’s GDP.

The report draws on data from more than 190 countries. Since 2000, underweight prevalence among children ages 5-19 has dropped from nearly 13% to 9.2%. At the same time, obesity has more than tripled, from 3% to 9.4%, and now exceeds underweight in every region except sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

Alarming trends across regions

The findings highlight especially high rates of childhood obesity in several Pacific Island nations. In Niue, 38% of 5-19-year-olds live with obesity; in the Cook Islands, 37%; and in Nauru, 33%. These figures have more than doubled since 2000, largely due to a shift away from traditional diets toward cheap, energy-dense imported foods.

Wealthier nations are not immune. For instance, 27% of children and adolescents in Chile are obese, along with 21% in the United States and 21% in the United Arab Emirates.

UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell commented:

When we talk about malnutrition, we are no longer just talking about underweight children… Obesity is a growing concern that can impact the health and development of children. Ultra-processed food is increasingly replacing fruits, vegetables and protein at a time when nutrition plays a critical role in children’s growth, cognitive development and mental health.

The health and economic costs

While undernutrition such as wasting and stunting remains a problem for children under five in many low- and middle-income countries, the prevalence of obesity among older children is rising quickly. Globally, 391 million children and adolescents, which is 1 in 5, are now overweight, with a significant proportion classified as obese.

The report stresses that this crisis is not about individual choices but about environments saturated with unhealthy foods. Ultra-processed products (high in sugar, salt, refined starches, and unhealthy fats) are dominating children’s diets. Schools and shops are filled with them, while digital marketing gives food companies unparalleled access to young audiences.

A UNICEF U-Report poll of 64,000 young people aged 13-24 across 170 countries showed just how pervasive this influence is. Seventy-five percent of respondents recalled seeing ads for sugary drinks, snacks, or fast foods in the previous week, and 60% said the ads made them want the products more. Even in conflict zones, 68% of young people reported exposure to such marketing.

The long-term costs are staggering. In Peru alone, obesity-related health impacts could cost more than US$210 billion. By 2035, the global economic toll of overweight and obesity is projected to exceed US$4 trillion annually.

Policies that make a difference

Despite the bleak outlook, there are success stories. Mexico, where ultra-processed foods and sugary drinks make up 40% of children’s daily calories, has banned the sale and distribution of these items in public schools. This policy shift has improved food environments for more than 34 million children.

UNICEF is urging governments, civil society, and global partners to act quickly by:

  • Enforcing strong policies such as food labeling, marketing restrictions, and taxes or subsidies to shift demand toward healthier foods.
  • Supporting social and behavior change programs that empower families to demand better food options.
  • Banning junk food sales and sponsorship in schools.
  • Safeguarding policy-making processes from food industry interference.
  • Strengthening social protection measures so vulnerable families can afford nutritious diets.

 

Russell emphasized:

In many countries we are seeing the double burden of malnutrition — the existence of stunting and obesity. This requires targeted interventions… Nutritious and affordable food must be available to every child to support their growth and development. We urgently need policies that support parents and caretakers to access nutritious and healthy foods for their children.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Obesity exceeds underweight for the first time among school-age children and adolescents globally — UNICEF,” UNICEF, 9/9/25
Source: “Child obesity level surpasses underweight cases worldwide for the first time, UNICEF warns,” UN.org, 9/9/25
Source: “For the first time, more kids are obese than underweight,” Yahoo.com, 9/15/25
Image by Porapak Apichodilok/Pexels

More About Absenteeism, Presenteeism, and Obesity

The authors of a 2008 meta-study described the obesity-related costs (that take such a toll on society as a whole) as “astounding.” “Obesity and Presenteeism: The Impact of Body Mass Index on Workplace Productivity” found that “the annual presenteeism cost for moderately or extremely obese workers was $1783.81, which is $506 higher than the cost for other workers.”

The study’s subject groups categorized as moderately and extremely obese experienced the highest absenteeism, averaging 91.08 absentee hours “for personal health reasons.” Financially, presenteeism is dreaded because…

[…] absences do not necessarily cost the employer the full value of the worker’s time to the extent that these are unpaid absences and that other workers are able to cover the missing shifts. Meanwhile, presenteeism is always a cost to employers because the worker is receiving a full paycheck despite reductions in productivity.

All in all, this accounts for a sizable chunk of the annual $900 billion that American employers pay for medical expenditures.

As numerous other studies have confirmed, the price paid by businesses for employee obesity is up there in the mega-bucks range. Unfortunately, much more work is needed on the minutiae of “Why?” When the cost derives from absenteeism and/or medical services rendered, this is easily understood.

What seems elusive is the exact process by which, when obese employees are involved, presenteeism (showing up for work but underperforming) is so wasteful. Is it just that they move more slowly when picking up a phone or straightening a stack of papers? Do they take longer lunch breaks, or spend more on-duty time moving back and forth to the snack machines? Do they fall asleep at their desks? What, exactly, is the issue?

Employees are on the job, but not functioning effectively because of medical or psychological conditions. But how does this manifest? We are told that the moderately and extremely obese workers experience the most limitations, as measured by the time needed to complete some tasks, and sheer inability to perform others.

In a broad sense, that tracks. If employed as a ballet dancer, a person with a BMI of over 35 would obviously fail. But how does the extra poundage inhibit or prohibit, for instance, a journalist? Presumably, the fingers on the keyboard would still be just as fast and accurate.

The particular questionnaire utilized in this study comprised 25 items falling into four categories:

The time scale addresses difficulties with meeting job expectations and scheduling demands. The physical scale focuses on workers’ ability to perform their normal job tasks as influenced by bodily strength, movement, endurance, coordination, and flexibility. The mental-interpersonal scale examines cognitive tasks, sensory input, and interactions with others. The output scale focuses on the quantity, quality, and timeliness of meeting job demands.

But the details involved in particular office tasks are not described. We know what the workers in a warehouse do. They move heavy physical objects from one location to another, which presumably requires an energy expenditure that helps prevent them from putting on weight. (Although, don’t count on it.) Still, a job in a plant or warehouse environment usually implies the ability to bend, stretch, squat, push, and walk.

But in an office setting, how heavy is a pencil or a file folder? Someone in the Information Technology department might need to lift a computer once in a while, but in general, what physical task is so daunting that a worker in the top obesity classification would be slowed down, stopped, or injured by its performance?

Okay, the IT person probably has to get under a desk now and then, to check on or reorganize some wiring. For a morbidly obese employee, this would be a struggle, costing time and possibly medical expenses.

It is easy to see why fitting beneath a desk, in the category of physical demands, could be problematic. However, seemingly, it would also qualify as a time issue, because the other employee who should be using that machine to complete work is unable to. Adding insult to injury, hashing out these procedural details adds to the time it takes to finish such studies.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Obesity and Presenteeism: The Impact of Body Mass Index on Workplace Productivity,” Academia.edu, 2008
Image by Pexels/Pixabay

Presenteeism and Obesity

A prominent and ever-growing cause of financial loss to businesses is obesity, as described in the previous post. That post included as a subheading “The big but…” which is indicative of the problem in general: Obesity is such an easy target for mockery.

One difficulty with this topic is the temptation to succumb to flippancy and make jokes about the ruinous cost to widen the doorways in workplaces, and replace collapsed chairs… which would be wrong. The humor temptation might be why obesity, as a contributing factor to presenteeism, does not cause as much concern as it should.

But for some very dedicated scholars and business experts, the problem is (to reference another corny old joke) “serious as a heart attack.” They and their colleagues have discovered that in the world of work, presenteeism (reporting for duty but performing less than optimally) is actually more expensive than absenteeism, or not showing up at all. Now, why, in the business realm, is obesity seen as exceptionally harmful to the bottom line?

A worker with a broken wrist will eventually have the cast removed and, after a period of readjustment, will probably return to their original state of productivity. A pregnant worker may need some extra leeway, but will eventually become, instead, the parent of a child who is elsewhere during working hours. That situation offers its own challenges to an employed woman, but most are able to return to their pre-motherhood level of usefulness on the job.

Another big but…

However, in most cases, obesity does not go away. Usually, it increases. Over time, whatever negative effect an employee’s obesity has on the situation will probably not change for the better, and will probably change for the worse.

But how, exactly, does obesity contribute to presenteeism, and how does it do that in an especially impactful and intractable way? Exactly how do our collective tons of excess body fat add to the price of doing business, and thus increase the amount that consumers pay for every product, service, and commodity?

Not surprisingly, it is possible to find a raft of academic papers exploring the relationship between excess weight and presenteeism. The connections may not be immediately obvious to the casual eye, but they certainly exist. There are many reasons why a person’s Body Mass Index might affect their ability to do top-notch work. Also, there is said to be a “threshold effect,” meaning that the workers with a BMI of 35 or higher are significantly less productive than their slimmer counterparts.

Moderately or extremely obese workers… experienced the greatest health-related work limitations, specifically regarding time needed to complete tasks and ability to perform physical job demands. These workers experienced a 4.2% health-related loss in productivity, 1.18% more than all other employees, which equates to an additional $506 annually in lost productivity per worker.

In 2010, journalist Alyssa Zamora described the work done by Eric Finkelstein and many others at Duke-National University of Singapore. Researchers took into consideration “three factors: employee medical expenditures, lost productivity on the job due to health problems (presenteeism), and absence from work (absenteeism).” Furthermore, health problems cost more than medical expenditures.

Zamora wrote,

Collectively, the per capita costs of obesity are as high as $16,900 for obese women with a body mass index (BMI) over 40 (roughly 100 pounds overweight) and $15,500 for obese men in the same BMI class. Presenteeism makes up the largest share of those costs.

Bottom line: “The cost of obesity among U.S. full-time employees is estimated to be $73.1 billion.”

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Obesity and presenteeism: the impact of body mass index on workplace productivity,” NIH.gov, January 2008
Source: “Obese Workers Cost More Than Healthcare, Absenteeism,” Duke.edu, 2010
Image by louisehoffman83/Pixabay

WHO Declares Semaglutide and Tirzepatide Essential Medicines

One of the world’s most in-demand medications has just earned a new designation: essential. The World Health Organization (WHO) has added semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy, to its Model List of Essential Medicines, alongside tirzepatide and other GLP-1 drugs.

This move is more than symbolic. By declaring semaglutide and tirzepatide “essential,” the WHO is signaling to governments worldwide that these treatments for type 2 diabetes and obesity are not luxuries but critical tools for public health.

What does it mean to be an “essential” medicine?

The WHO’s essential medicines list has existed since 1977. It’s designed to highlight drugs that provide the greatest health benefits, with the goal of improving affordability and access globally.

Today, the list includes 523 medicines for adults and 374 for children. More than 150 countries rely on it to guide decisions about which medications to prioritize for purchase, insurance coverage, and distribution.

When a drug makes the list, it’s often a catalyst for lower prices, expanded insurance coverage, and wider availability. As Yukiko Nakatani, WHO’s assistant director-general for health systems, put it:

The new editions of essential medicines lists mark a significant step toward expanding access to new medicines with proven clinical benefits and with high potential for global public health impact.

Why GLP-1 drugs are game-changers

As we’ve discussed before, the GLP-1 receptor agonists mimic natural hormones that regulate hunger, metabolism, and insulin response. For diabetes, they reliably help patients control blood sugar, reducing complications and improving long-term outcomes. For obesity, they are far more effective for weight loss than diet and exercise alone, helping many patients lose significant, sustained weight. And for overall health, by addressing obesity and diabetes, they also lower risks for cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other chronic illnesses.

Tirzepatide goes a step further by targeting not just GLP-1 but also GIP-1, another hormone involved in hunger regulation. The impact is already measurable. In the U.S., 2023 marked the first year in a decade that adult obesity rates declined, a trend many experts attribute to GLP-1s.

The accessibility is a problem, however

Despite their promise, GLP-1s are often out of reach for the people who need them most. This is due to a number of reasons, including:

  • High cost. Even after price reductions, monthly expenses can run into the hundreds of dollars.
  • Limited insurance coverage. In the U.S., many public and private insurers do not cover these drugs for obesity, restricting access to wealthier patients.
  • Global inequity. In many countries, access is even scarcer, despite diabetes and obesity being rising global health threats.

 

Deusdedit Mubangizi, WHO’s director of policy and standards for medicines, emphasized the urgency of addressing this gap:

Achieving equitable access to essential medicines requires a coherent health system response backed by strong political will, multisectoral cooperation, and people-centered programs that leave no one behind.

What the WHO’s decision could change

By adding semaglutide, tirzepatide, dulaglutide, and liraglutide to its essential medicines list, the WHO is paving the way for broader access. Some potential outcomes include generic development, for one. Canada is expected to approve the first generic semaglutide as early as 2026. In the U.S., however, generics likely won’t arrive until 2031.

The designation could also pressure drugmakers to reduce prices and encourage governments to negotiate more aggressively. The other two potential outcomes include better insurance coverage as public and private insurers may be more willing to cover drugs considered essential, and wider distribution, where primary care doctors could play a bigger role in prescribing GLP-1s, not just specialists.

Adding GLP-1s to the WHO’s essential medicines list is about more than lowering blood sugar or reducing waistlines. It’s a recognition that obesity and diabetes are among the world’s most pressing health challenges, and that effective tools to treat them must be accessible to all, not just the privileged few. As more countries act on this designation, millions of people may finally gain access to medications that can improve — and even save — their lives.

How it will play out globally remains to be seen, but let’s choose to be optimistic.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Ozempic Is an ‘Essential’ Drug, WHO Says as Agency Calls for Cheaper Generics,” Gizmodo, 9/5/25
Source: “WHO Includes Popular Anti-Obesity Drugs on Essential Medicines List for Diabetes Control,” Health Policy Watch, 9/5/25
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Some Aspects of Presenteeism

As we have seen, the behavior known as presenteeism costs everyone a lot, in ways that are not always immediately obvious. According to a very scholarly work, of which more than seven full pages consist of references…

Studies abound that not only show how prevalent presenteeism is across a range of occupations and sectors… but also position it as more costly than absenteeism.

The first paragraph of “Presenteeism: An Introduction to a Prevailing Global Phenomenon” mentions the current need to “achieve more with less.” The factor that should always matter most is individual health and well-being, which is why we discuss it here. In cases of rampant presenteeism, everyone’s job performance is negatively affected, and productivity is not optimal. This, of course, implies negative financial impact and a bottom line that does not look good. The case is not always hopeless, and strategic management can make a difference.

In the real world, this may mean that, actually, different philosophies or even different value systems are needed. Of course, professional scholars are accustomed to looking beyond superficial meaning. How sick does a person need to be before the illness should be considered serious enough to keep them home? Who gets to decide if a worker is actually ill? And what does “attending work” really mean, anyway? Haven’t we learned from the pandemic that many jobs can be done very adequately from home?

Related inescapable facts

An employee with the flu can be reasonably expected to stay home until well, and past the point of spreading the contagion. Then they return, and even though some productivity has been lost, it’s back to “business as usual.”

Another case history: An employee with a broken arm in a cast has the doctor’s permission to return to work. But maybe that person isn’t really well enough. The fracture may still be painful, which affects the quality of work. So the person might take analgesics, and although the distraction caused by pain is lessened, the medication may cause problems that add up to “presenteeism” — namely, being slower, less effective, and maybe even dangerously mistake-prone.

Further, the cast itself causes awkwardness and discomfort in several ways. You want to keep it clean. It itches inside. Minor chores and actions that you used to do with one hand have to be ineptly performed with the other hand. You run out of patience sooner. Your general energy level is low, and the little extra kindnesses you might have done to make someone else’s day easier will not be attempted. Again, the conditions are there for presenteeism: the state of technically being on the job, but doing it so poorly that when all is said and done, the business actually takes a financial hit.

Still, even that counterproductive scenario will not last forever. Eventually, the fracture will heal, the cast will be removed, and after perhaps a period of adjustment, the worker will be back to normal. The episode of damaging, costly presenteeism will eventually come to a close.

The big but…

In most cases, obesity does not go away, and it usually increases. This implies that the presenteeism-related financial damage caused by obesity will not eventually subside, and the effect will only become more severe.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Presenteeism: An Introduction to a Prevailing Global Phenomenon,” Cambridge.org, 08/09/18
Image by Vika_Glitter/Pixabay

Presenteeism As a Concept With Consequences

Absenteeism describes the state of being absent, but the term “presenteeism” is loaded with much more significance than merely showing up. The term goes way back to the 1930s, where it appeared in the work of writer H. Withers.

Skipping ahead several decades, we find such citations as a chapter in Contemporary Occupational Health Psychology whose subtitles include “The Many Definitions of Presenteeism” and “Problems with Presenteeism Research.” Almost a century after the phenomenon was first named, here is a contemporary definition by Will Kenton, from Investopedia:

Presenteeism refers to the lost productivity that occurs when employees are not fully functioning in the workplace because of an illness, injury, or other condition.

People arrive at the job site, and even try hard to give an optimal performance, but they are not able to do their best, and are likely to make mistakes and in other ways contribute to an overall loss of effectiveness. Although they are trying, their physical, mental or emotional unwellness renders them unable to operate at the highest — or even an adequate — level.

The American Psychological Association dictionary offers this about presenteeism:

The resulting reduction in productivity is a growing financial and safety concern for employers, particularly since research suggests presenteeism is much more prevalent and damaging than absenteeism. Factors that drive presenteeism include a large workload, fear of missing deadlines, fear of disciplinary action or job loss, missed pay, the desire to conserve leave for future use, loyalty to coworkers, company loyalty, and job satisfaction.

A very recent Childhood Obesity News post quoted Duke University researchers who found that “obesity-related absenteeism and presenteeism cost U.S. employers $73 billion annually.” How do researchers arrive at a number like this, and its related conclusions?

Here is a surprising observation: Presenteeism might be an even larger problem than absenteeism. To use a sports analogy, “playing hurt” can cost the company more money than would be the case if people simply did not show up. On top of that, if a well-intentioned employee insists on working while unfit (or a boss insists on their doing so), it is easy to see how the illness or condition might be prolonged, which can rack up even more expenses down the road.

And obviously, where a communicable disease is involved, there is a real possibility that the illness will spread, leading to even more cases of both absenteeism and presenteeism.

Even enlightened employers who try to address the problem with wellness programs, varied types of leave, flexible scheduling, and other potentially helpful measures find themselves frustrated. Here is a significant quotation:

The costs of presenteeism have been estimated to be larger in real terms as employees suffering from longer-term conditions see persistent drops in productivity.

A perfect example of one of those “longer-term conditions” is… wait for it… obesity. And we will get back to that. Meanwhile, obviously, a company ought to do all it can to incentivize good habits and allow for a workplace culture that avoids presenteeism, whatever that may require. This includes the facilitation of easily transferable workflows, and even of working from home if at all possible.

No matter how inconvenient or apparently costly these measures may be in the moment, they are almost guaranteed to reduce overall expenses and rescue the bottom line from even worse consequences. And of course, a manager would do well to set a good example by not showing up in the workplace in obviously unfit condition, especially if their situation involves germs.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Presenteeism,” OED.com, undated
Source: “Presenteeism: A Short History and a Cautionary Tale,” Wiley.com, 03/29/12
Source: “Presenteeism: What It Is and How It Works,” Investopedia.com, 01/06/25
Source: “Presenteeism,” APA.org, undated
Image by re_almeida/Pixabay

Digital Tools in Pediatric Obesity Care

Childhood obesity continues to be one of the most pressing public health issues in the U.S. Beyond weight gain, the condition raises risks for type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and emotional challenges that can carry into adulthood. While traditional, in-person programs remain valuable, many families struggle with barriers such as cost, travel, scheduling, and stigma.

That’s where telehealth and digital health interventions (DHIs) come in. These tools offer clinicians new ways to support patients through approaches that are scalable, family-centered, and easier to access. Let’s take a look at a piece penned by Mollie R. Cummins, Ph.D., RN, about the benefits of DHIs backed by research, recommended strategies for clinicians and parents, and current challenges.

What the research shows

Recent systematic reviews and clinical trials suggest that digital programs can do more than just help lower body mass index (BMI). Children who participate in well-designed DHIs have shown improvements in diet quality, increased physical activity, and better emotional well-being. Some programs also document reductions in body fat percentage, especially when combined with traditional clinical care.

Importantly, these findings align with the 2023 American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Clinical Practice Guideline, which encourages clinicians to consider digital tools as part of comprehensive obesity treatment.

Broader benefits beyond BMI

Cummins writes:

Beyond weight, DHIs have demonstrated benefits in nutrition, physical activity, and psychosocial health. Children engaged in digital programs consumed fewer sugary beverages, ate more fruits and vegetables, and became more active. Interventions that incorporated gamification or active video gaming promoted movement and reduced sedentary time. Importantly, several studies also documented improvements in quality of life, self-efficacy, and self-esteem.

Key strategies for clinicians

When using DHIs, clinicians should think beyond the technology itself and consider how to integrate these tools effectively into care. Here are some best practices:

  • Blend digital with traditional care. Programs work best when paired with in-person visits or established clinical management.
  • Engage parents actively. Family involvement improves adherence and helps reinforce healthy habits at home.
  • Focus on behavior and psychosocial goals. Increases in activity, improved diet, and boosts in self-esteem can be as meaningful as weight-related outcomes.
  • Prioritize interactive, tailored tools. Children stay engaged when programs feel relevant and enjoyable.
  • Plan for the long term. Short-term results are promising, but sustained change requires ongoing support and structured follow-up.

Barriers and challenges

While promising, digital interventions aren’t without hurdles. Clinicians need to anticipate challenges such as:

  • Declining engagement. Many families start strong but taper off after a few months. Booster sessions or scheduled check-ins may help maintain momentum.
  • Access and equity gaps. Not all families have reliable internet, digital devices, or the literacy to use them effectively. Screening for these issues is critical.
  • Safety considerations. Too much screen time or excessive focus on weight tracking can be counterproductive. Monitoring mental health and encouraging balanced use is essential.
  • Workflow integration. Without alignment to electronic health records or clinical processes, DHIs can add strain. Programs must fit seamlessly into care delivery.
  • Evidence variability. Not all digital tools are created equal. Clinicians should prioritize those with peer-reviewed research and transparent methods.

Digital obesity care of the future

Cummins writes:

The next phase of telehealth-supported obesity care will require innovation and clinical adaptation. These priorities are consistent with the World Health Organization’s global recommendations

Areas of growth include:

  • Personalized care pathways using artificial intelligence and data analytics to deliver real-time, adaptive feedback.
  • Wearable integration for tracking activity, sleep and nutrition, but only if clinicians can incorporate the data without overwhelming workflows.
  • Sustained models of care such as year-long hybrid programs that blend telehealth visits, digital coaching and community resources.
  • Family-centered design, ensuring interventions reflect cultural needs and practical realities.
  • Broader outcome measures, including sleep, self-esteem and social participation, not just BMI.

 

Summing it up, Cummins writes:

Telehealth and digital health interventions can be valuable tools for clinicians working with children and families affected by obesity. While weight reduction outcomes appear modest, the broader behavioral and psychosocial benefits are also important. By selecting evidence-based, interactive, and family-centered programs and by planning for long-term support, clinicians can use DHIs to expand access, increase engagement, and promote healthier futures for children.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Using Telehealth and Digital Health to Treat Childhood Obesity,” Telehealth.org, 8/27/25
Source: “Digital health interventions to treat overweight and obesity in children and adolescents: An umbrella review,” Obesity Reviews, 2/19/25
Source: “Digital health, technology‐driven or technology‐assisted interventions for the management of obesity in children and adolescents,” Cochrane Library, 7/10/25
Image by Tima Miroshnichenko/Pexels

Is Obesity Everyone’s Business?

Here is one final look at an archived piece of health journalism from Dr. Bruce Y. Lee, which featured seven myths about obesity under the punning title, “Obesity is Everyone’s Business.” The general topic of this sequence of posts is the overall cost to society of treating and/or preventing obesity, and especially the way in which it has increasingly affected the cost of doing business.

In a very pragmatic demonstration of cause and effect, the author enumerated some of the
“immediate and long term physical, psychological, and social ailments” caused by obesity, which in turn affect a person’s effectiveness on the job. It should be mentioned that upper-level executives are just as prone to debilitating illness as the most humble new hire in the shipping department. The difference is that the folks in the higher ranks are more advantageously positioned to hide the deficiencies in their work output.

The check makes a difference

Also, executives can much more easily afford health-producing commodities like high-quality food, vacation time to recover from stress, membership in fitness establishments, and so on. However, in recent years, there has been some improvement in the equality with which corporations try to affect the basic health of their people.

Many physical ailments may be detrimental to an employee’s productivity. Depending on what field of commerce they are in, the damage from workplace machines, noise, and substances in the air can be quite serious. Even psychological issues (depression, anxiety, etc.) are perfectly capable of minimizing the usefulness of a worker at any level. A conscientious manager never wants to see conditions deteriorate to where workers experience sickness, pain, lack of energy, and the consequent lowering of morale.

Hopefully, that consideration results at least partly from generous human considerations. It is possible, after all, to operate simultaneously on two different planes of consciousness. Management can care and, at the same time, remain conscious that any and all physical and mental dysfunction in the workplace leads directly to lowered productivity, increased healthcare expenses, and shrinking profits.

This quoted paragraph illustrates some of the trends that motivated the business world to take a hard look at the consequences of obesity in the workplace. As previously mentioned,

A study by researchers at Duke University tabulated that obesity-related absenteeism and presenteeism cost U.S. employers $73 billion annually. [W]hile normal-weight employees cost on average $3,838 per year in healthcare costs, overweight to morbidly obese employees cost between $4,252 and $8,067.

Once researchers have wrapped their heads around some numbers, they enjoy expressing the significance of those figures in various ways. In this case, the authors also calculated the dollar amount of Body Mass Index points above the normal range. Once the border of obesity territory has been broached, statically speaking, each BMI point was said to represent an additional amount of around $200 per year that the company would pay out in healthcare costs for that employee.

The broad overview matters

Getting back to Dr. Lee, he formatted his Forbes.com article as a series of propositions which turn out not to be true; or myths. As Myth #5, he specified: “Obesity has little to do with overall business strategy, management, operations and finance.”

On the contrary, this author emphasized the big picture and maintained that “Employee weight and health can be a bellwether or ‘canary in a coal mine’ of how the overall business is functioning overall.” Why? Because a person’s normal weight can say a lot about their dedication, discipline, and work ethic, as well as function as an indicator of “the social, cultural, and financial situation and environment.”

In various industries, many members of the workforce have learned (the hard way) to keep the majority of their job-related opinions to themselves. Surveys and requests for feedback about company policy are often thinly-disguised traps designed to identify underlings who might be inclined to cause trouble. If “management” really cared about the average worker (the thinking goes), that collective noun would have caught on a long time ago, and realized that the whole outfit, from top to bottom, needed refurbishment.

Instead of initiating feedback requests that could be viewed with suspicion, the wise executive might be well advised to consult a psychologist familiar with the health manifestations of discontent — because obesity can definitely be interpreted as one of them.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Obesity Is Everyone’s Business,” Forbes.com, 09/01/15
Image by daha3131053/Pixabay

More About Offices, Desks, and Obesity

Note: This post will definitely make more sense if considered in context with its predecessor.

Journalist Rodney Wagner poses other pertinent questions and makes several points about desk dining. It can certainly get a person fed “without sacrificing productivity,” because the diner is still able to concentrate on the work being accomplished at the desk, while chewing and swallowing.

On the other hand, we might add, many authorities believe that a person’s full attention and conscious participation ought to be directed toward eating. Otherwise, they have not fully experienced the intake of nutrition, and are apt to overeat in compensation for that lack, and become obese.

At any rate, according to this authority, snacking at work can allegedly help to maintain mental energy and improve alertness (though it seems the same might be said of periodic exercise breaks, or inhaling a hit of oxygen). However, admittedly, there are also “numerous downsides to eating at your desk.”

The person’s attention may be distracted from the work at hand (especially, we presume, if eating involves consulting a menu and placing an order.) Worse yet, the average worker’s meal often tends to involve items purchased from snack vending machines, the contents of which are universally acknowledged to be unhealthful and fat-promoting.

At any rate, the availability of food and water to those who need them is a factor that a manager can affect. While many people do not care for the nanny-state implications, it is probably on the whole a good thing, when those in charge bear some degree of responsibility for the well-being of the workers.

Strength in motion

For the well-being of employees who like to burn calories by walking between the floors of a building, the security of stairwells should be assured. Overall, the important thing is to cultivate an awareness of how extensively employee health affects productivity, morale, and healthcare costs. Basic amenities like breathable air count for a lot. So really, the biggest error an executive can make is to assume that she or he might not be able to affect the situation positively.

Understandably, one of the myths that Dr. Lee identified is the fallacy of ineffectualness. An employer should never buy into the idea that little can be done to shrink obesity in the workplace. There is a cliche that fits the case very neatly: “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.”

The boss can make a difference

Often, there is a belief that not even the most well-intentioned business can do much to prevent obesity, which by extension implies there is nothing they can do to stem the rising costs of obesity that adversely affect the company’s bottom line. Dr. Lee resists this defeatist notion because the reach of the job may in fact be extensive:

Your workplace can affect your commuting, sleep patterns, relationships with family and friends, available food at home, energy to exercise, overall stress levels and many other aspects of your life… No matter how you prioritize work-life balance, your workplace does have an impact on the rest of your life […] and in turn obesity.

Of course, obviously, the job affects the weight class of the worker’s entire family, because if the pay is not sufficient to feed them well, the consequences will show up. Which brings the topic back to the cost of a health plan, if indeed such an amenity exists at all. A company with common sense ought to recognize that it is cheaper to pay for obesity prevention than for bariatric surgery.

At the same time, corporate leadership must have the sensitivity to prevent its caring approach from coming across as criticism or worse yet, as a threat. In some times and places, rules are in effect to shield workers from various types of discrimination — even from what might appear as fat-shaming.

Dr. Lee’s last word to the bosses is,

In the end, the heart of a business is its employees. Having employees who are overweight and unhealthy is akin to a football team trying to compete with chronically injured players. If you view obesity as a completely separate issue from your business, you do so at your peril. To make a real difference, you need to have real substantial change in the culture and operations of a workplace.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Source: “Is It Good to Eat While Working? Uncovering the Truth,” MeatChefTools.com, 02/03/25
Source: “Obesity Is Everyone’s Business,” Forbes.com, 09/01/15
Image by Pexels/Pixabay

Yale Study Explores How Obesity Impacts Health

A new research letter published in JAMA Pediatrics is shedding light on just how much obesity contributes to serious health conditions in young people. The study, led by Yale School of Medicine medical student Ashwin Chetty, estimates the extent to which obesity-related conditions (ORCs) can be tied to obesity and overweight in adolescents and young adults across the United States.

Chetty and his team used publicly available data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) to dig into the numbers. The goal? To better understand how much obesity directly contributes to conditions like prediabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia, and how preventing or treating obesity might lower those risks.

As Chetty explains,

Obesity can cause hypertension, for example, but many people have hypertension who don’t have obesity. So, we want to know how many hypertension cases are caused by obesity. And that’s important because that gives us an estimate of the impact obesity has on hypertension and diseases like it and by extension, the impact that treating or preventing obesity can have on those diseases.

Building on previous research

This wasn’t Chetty’s first time tackling the question of obesity’s role in chronic conditions. While working with Alissa Chen, MD, MPH, and Alexandra Hajduk, PhD, MPH, he had already applied similar methods to study older adults ages 65 and up.

That earlier work sparked an idea. After meeting James Nugent, MD, MPH, at a pediatrics interest group, Chetty realized the same approach could be applied to adolescents and young adults, a group that hadn’t been studied as extensively. He teamed up with Dr. Nugent and Mona Sharifi, MD, MPH, to adapt the research for a younger population.

Just weeks before this new paper, the group had already published another piece in JAMA Pediatrics titled “Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist Eligibility Among US Adolescents and Young Adults.” Using those earlier definitions and methods, Chetty was able to compile fresh data for this latest study on ORCs.

A collaborative effort across specialties

One thing that stands out about this research is the cross-disciplinary teamwork. Physicians and researchers from adult medicine, geriatrics, and pediatrics — groups that don’t often overlap — came together to ask big-picture questions.

Chetty says,

We’re asking questions that bridge a lot of different populations… One of the nice things about being a medical student is that I can pivot between research on adults and research in pediatrics. The faculty who I worked with were all really open to taking part in this research. People’s openness to work on ideas that might not be squarely in their field of interest is something I really appreciate about the faculty at Yale.

What the numbers show

The findings highlight just how significant obesity’s impact is on young people’s health. The study estimated that 20–35% of adolescent cases of prediabetes, hypertension and dyslipidemia are attributable to obesity. Also, 40% of young adult cases of these same conditions can be traced back to obesity.

Chetty breaks it down:

Our interpretation of that statistical conclusion is if you were able to eliminate obesity from this population, you would reduce the prevalence of those obesity-related conditions by that amount.

Looking ahead

The team isn’t stopping here. The next step is to model the potential long-term benefits of treating obesity earlier in life. Could early intervention lower future rates of hypertension or diabetes? And what would that mean for overall healthcare costs?

Dr. Nugent praised Chetty’s initiative, noting,

This work is a testament to Ashwin who asked interesting questions and found clever ways to answer them with publicly available data. Not many people get published in JAMA Pediatrics twice in a year, never mind twice in the same month. And he’s not working with a million-dollar grant, he’s asking good questions and finding ways to answer them with NHANES data.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Examining the Impact of Treating and Preventing Obesity to Prevent Obesity-Related Conditions,” Yale School of Medicine, 8/25/25
Source: “Proportion of Obesity-Related Conditions Attributable to Obesity and Overweight in US Youth,” JAMA Pediatrics, 8/25/25
Source: “What’s the Cause of Obesity-Related Conditions in Youth?,” Medscape, 8/25/25
Image by Vitaly Gariev/Pexels

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Profiles: Kids Struggling with Weight

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The Book

OVERWEIGHT: What Kids Say explores the obesity problem from the often-overlooked perspective of children struggling with being overweight.

About Dr. Robert A. Pretlow

Dr. Robert A. Pretlow is a pediatrician and childhood obesity specialist. He has been researching and spreading awareness on the childhood obesity epidemic in the US for more than a decade.
You can contact Dr. Pretlow at:

Presentations

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the American Society of Animal Science 2020 Conference
What’s Causing Obesity in Companion Animals and What Can We Do About It

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the World Obesity Federation 2019 Conference:
Food/Eating Addiction and the Displacement Mechanism

Dr. Pretlow’s Multi-Center Clinical Trial Kick-off Speech 2018:
Obesity: Tackling the Root Cause

Dr. Pretlow’s 2017 Workshop on
Treatment of Obesity Using the Addiction Model

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation for
TEC and UNC 2016

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the 2015 Obesity Summit in London, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s invited keynote at the 2014 European Childhood Obesity Group Congress in Salzburg, Austria.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2013 European Congress on Obesity in Liverpool, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2011 International Conference on Childhood Obesity in Lisbon, Portugal.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2010 Uniting Against Childhood Obesity Conference in Houston, TX.

Food & Health Resources