Obesity can be a problematic task due to the various factors that need to be taken into consideration. Before the numerous advancements of health care, obesity was initially assessed by anthiopometie measurements such as weight for height, skin fold thickness, and waist circumferences. Obesity has grown so much it can now be said to have replaced smoking as the number one preventable …show more content…
There isn't anything to help obesity people which there should because some people think obesity people don't live right when there body's are like they are. Obesity is a disease for fat people. People do not know that obesity was an disease until you started working on it, obesity can kill you, obesity is the fifth leading risk for global death. Obesity is very harmful and it causes sugar. Obesity ranks second among preventable causes of death. Counties where overweight and obesity kills more people than underweight. While some people may be genetically pre clipped to obesity making healthy changes your diet lifestyle. Have important consequences for morbidity disability and quality of life. Obesity has reached epidemic proportions globally, with at least 2.8 million people are dying each year for an result to being overweight or obese. Today half adults and some children struggle with obesity. Obesity is linked to more than 60 chronic young children to older adults. There are effects for obesity health such as health issues, depression, eating disorders, and death. When it tends to go through familie simplifying genetic factors a small minority of cases of obesity can be explained by gland or hormonal problems. Sex hormones can also affect obesity. In a woman's body fat levels during adolescence, pregnancy and menopause are determined by the balance of the female sex …show more content…
It is defined as a person's weight in kilograms divided by the square of his height in meters (kg/m2). In 2014, an estimated 41 million children under the age of 5 years were overweight or obese. Once considered a high-income country problem, overweight and obesity are now on the rise in low- and middle-income countries, particularly in urban settings. In Africa, the number of children who are overweight or obese has nearly doubled from 5.4 million in 1990 to 10.6 million in 2014. Nearly half of the children under 5 who were overweight or obese in 2014 lived in