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Abstract
Obesity is a major health problem in the United States, but the number of obesity-attributable
deaths has not been rigorously estimated.
To estimate the number of deaths, annually, attributable to obesity among US adults.
Data from 5 prospective cohort studies (the Alameda Community Health Study, the Framingham
Heart Study, the Tecumseh Community Health Study, the American Cancer Society Cancer
Prevention Study I, and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I Epidemiologic
Follow-up Study) and 1 published study (the Nurses' Health Study) in conjunction with
1991 national statistics on body mass index distributions, population size, and overall
deaths.
Adults, 18 years or older in 1991, classified by body mass index (kg/m2) as overweight
(25-30), obese (30-35), and severely obese (>35).
Relative hazard ratio (HR) of death for obese or overweight persons.
The estimated number of annual deaths attributable to obesity varied with the cohort
used to calculate the HRs, but findings were consistent overall. More than 80% of
the estimated obesity-attributable deaths occurred among individuals with a body mass
index of more than 30 kg/m2. When HRs were estimated for all eligible subjects from
all 6 studies, the mean estimate of deaths attributable to obesity in the United States
was 280184 (range, 236111-341153). Hazard ratios also were calculated from data for
nonsmokers or never-smokers only. When these HRs were applied to the entire population
(assuming the HR applied to all individuals), the mean estimate for obesity-attributable
death was 324 940 (range, 262541-383410).
The estimated number of annual deaths attributable to obesity among US adults is approximately
280000 based on HRs from all subjects and 325000 based on HRs from only nonsmokers
and never-smokers.