JUST DO THE MATH
Has the U.N. food agency lost its mind, and the Globe and Mail?
This week the UN report
FAO: The State of Food and Agriculture 2013 ( found at http://www.fao.org/docrep/018/i3300e/i3300e00.htm)
was highlighted in a half-page spread in the Globe and Mail, July 15, 2013 L3 “Obesity
is taking on epic proportions globally” which was simply a list of statistics
and an oversized, fat-at–the-waist globe graphic.
The data and G&M
focus on obesity is interesting as the actual report mentions the issue but it
is almost - but not quite - buried in the 79 page report -- whose actual focus
is on world hunger and malnutrition.
Obesity, in fact,
accounts for less than 4% of the print space and UN focus. The country by country obesity statistics
used by the G&M are from the tables of the Statistical Annex, pp. 71-79,
and are the last column of five columns; the first four focusing on malnutrition
and its effects on child growth stunting (col 1), Anaemia (col 2), Vitamin A Deficiency
(col 3) and Iodine deficiency (col 4).
So why the G&M
focus on only the obesity data?
Because it is a hot issue and the new ‘enemy’.
And the UN statistics
are horrendous – if they were credible!
Yes, the U.N. report
mentions on p. 1 that 500 million people world-wide as of 2008 are obese. Pages
57-58 discuss the mixed results from enforced nutrition labels and reviews the
literature on junk food advertising and beverage restriction recommendations. And it concludes, p.60, that better nutrition
education will help everyone: from the 2
billion who are malnourished to the millions who are obese; and of course,
regular exercise is important.
What earth-shattering
news!!!!
The Obesity numbers, country by country, as highlighted by the G&M,
are truly dramatic. The U.N. report in
fact notes the obesity rates worldwide have gone up from 6% to 12% between 1980
and 2008 (p.12) citing the study by Stevens et al., 2012.
Canada is listed as
having 24.1% of the adult population as obese (i.e., 1 in 4) and the U.S.A., in
the actual report, Statistical Annex p. 79, is rated 31.8% (i.e., 1 in 3)!!!
If these numbers alone
do not warn you that SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THE UN METHOD OR CRITERIA FOR
OBESITY, then the other statistics should.
The top 20 obese lands
are Nauru at a whopping 71.1%, Cook Islands at 64.1%, Tonga at 59.6%, Samoa at
55.5%, Palau 50.7%, Marshall Islands 46.5%, Kiribati 45.8%, Kuwait 42.8%,
Micronesia 42%, Saint Kits 35.2%, Saudi Arabia 35.2%, Belize 34.9%, Egypt
34.6%, Jordan 34.3%, U.A.E. 33.7%, South
Africa 33.5%, Barbados 33.4%, Qatar 33.1% and Mexico at 32.8%.
At the opposite
extreme are Bangladesh 1.1% obese, Ethiopia 1.2%, Nepal 1.5%, Vietnam 1.6%, Madagascar
1.7%, Eritrea 1.8%, D.R. Congo 1.9%, India 1.9%, Cambodia 2.3% and Burkina Faso
at 2.4%.
Regionally, only
Africa, Asia and Oceania are below 12% in obesity with the Americas and Europe
all over 20% obese.
So what is going on here?
Since medical and
government records are limited for many of the over 2.6 billion people of India
and China (which make up over 1/3 of the world’s population) a tiny sample with
massive extrapolation must have been used.
The same extrapolation would be needed for the Arab world and rest of
Africa, so the statistic methods used may well be skewed.
What is more likely, and
more important, is that the U.N.’s assumed ‘normal’ weight range is too low and
does not sufficiently take into account the fact that once drought and famine
are eliminated, people eat more and gain weight – returning to a more normal
weight for their bodies under optimal – or more optimal -- food conditions.
But the real culprit
in distorting the numbers is the BMI – again!!!!!
Too bad the G&M and
U.N. did not pay more attention to this yardstick used in the report for
determining obesity – the now highly disputed and error-prone BMI!!!
Yes, that BMI against
which I have railed in previous blogs; using both more recent expert reviews
and common sense observation: Do 1 in every 4 Canadians over age 19 look OBESE
to you? – as the UN’s Canadian BMI statistic of 24.3% claims?
The U.N. report, to its credit, does give its BMI definition and mentions
some concerns:
p. 72 Obesity
Adults over 20 years of age are
considered obese when their body
mass index (BMI) is greater than
or equal to 30. BMI equals body
weight in kilograms divided by height in metres
squared (kg/m2).
And it does point out that the BMI has been criticized by reputable experts,
and has been shown to be especially unreliable regarding Asian populations.
To
quote the U.N. report and its many caveats – which it then ignores --
p. 17 (my underlining)
Limitations of
using the body mass index in measuring excessive body fat
Body mass index (BMI) is a
convenient and widely available measure of underweight,overweight and obesity.
It is a proxy measure of excessive body fat. BMI does not distinguish
between weight from fatty tissue and that from muscle tissue;
nor does it
indicate how an individual’s body mass is distributed. People who carry
a disproportionate amount of weight around their abdomen are at a higher risk
of various health problems; waist circumference can therefore be a useful
measure to gain additional insight, but it is measured less often and less
easily than BMI (National Obesity Observatory, 2009). BMI classifications were
established based on risks of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but
populations and individuals vary in terms of how BMI relates to both body fat
composition and the prevalence of disease (WHO, 2000). The limitations of the
international BMI classifications are particularly evident among Asian
populations. For example, in 2002 an expert group, convened by the World Health
Organization (WHO), found that the Asian populations considered have a higher
percentage of body fat as well as higher incidence of diabetes and
cardiovascular disease at lower BMIs than do Caucasians (controlling for age
and sex). However, the experts also found differences in the appropriate BMI
cut-off points among the Asian populations themselves. The expert group
decided to maintain the existing international standard classifications, but also
recommended the development of an additional classification system for Asian
populations that uses lower cut-offs and encouraged the use of country-specific
cut-offs and the waist circumference measure (Nishida, 2004).
Only surgery to reduce
the size of one’s stomach or intestinal tract -- to allow for weight loss by
reducing the body’s organs which extract calories from food – really works.
Even medically
supervised, short-term weight loss dieting does not last, and lifetime Weight Watcher programs are just
that: lifetime semi-starvation to get that thinner look your body’s genetics
refuse to allow under normal conditions.
So the U.N.’s report,
like the other studies using the misguided and error filled BMI standard, is JUNK
science and dangerous!!!
The outlandish
numbers defy reason and what our eyes see all around us.
A reality check says
they are wrong.
Shame on UN and shame
on the Globe and Mail for promoting this false mania.
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