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Page Update: 1/11/2006
Site Update: 7/31/2006

Version: 6.1.1


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Obesity and Environment in Indianapolis: An Analysis of Neighborhood Indicators

Introduction

Obesity is presently one of the most serious and challenging health problems facing the developed world. According to the World Health Organization, 55 percent of U.S. adults are overweight with minority women being the most affected. The prevalence of overweight in U.S. children, estimated between 22 and 30 percent, has doubled since 1980.1, 2-4 The alarmingly high rate of obesity and its rapid rise are present here in Indiana. In the year 2000, 21 percent of adults in Indiana were considered obese and 35 percent were considered overweight.5 These figures rank Indiana as the twelfth fattest state in the nation.

What is causing the dramatic and threatening rise in obesity among the population? One researcher concisely captured the causes of obesity in a metaphor: "Genes load the gun, the environment pulls the trigger." 6 Genetic factors are important, but it is highly improbable that changes in genetic factors explain the rapid increases in obesity prevalence over the past two decades.7 Rather, there is increasing evidence that the obesity epidemic is rooted in environmental factors that promote excessive caloric intake and sedentary lifestyle.8-10 There also is evidence that these environmental factors are worsening, so that the already high rate of obesity is expected to climb.11

Children's lifestyles are becoming strikingly sedentary as well. Studies have found that the amount of television viewing is directly related to the likelihood of obesity. Children watch an average of 28 hours of television per week.9 In 1977, children aged 5 to 15 years walked or biked for 15.8 percent of all their trips; by 1995, children made only 9.9 percent of their trips by foot or bicycle.12