Title: OBESITY As An Example
1OBESITY As An Example
2Obesity Presence in Americans(30 kg/M2)
Age Prevalence 2-5 10
6-19 15 20 male 22.6 20 female
22.8
Lowest in African Americans Highest in Hispanics
both female male
3Obesity, Television and Soft Drinks385 (185,
199) grade 6,7 students
- TV Hours/School NightVariable
2 P - BMI Z Score 0.34 0.82
- Body Fat 18.5 23.1
-
Soft Drinks/DayVariable
2 P BMI Z Score 0.51 1.02 Body Fat 20.3 24.6
ARCH Ped Adolesc Med Sept 2003
4- About 45 of women and 25 of men are trying to
lose weight at any one time. Only one-fifth are
using the recommended combination of fewer
calories and increased exercise. - 15 of youngsters ages 6 to 19 and 10 of
children 2 through 5 are seriously overweight. - Americans spend more than 33 billion a year on
weight-loss products and services. However, the
economic cost of obesity in the United States was
about 117 billion in 2000. - Sources AHA, NIH, CDC, NHNES
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9The Correlative Factors in CMR Are Getting Worse
10Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1986
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
11Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1990
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
12Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1994
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
13Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1998
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
14Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2001
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
15Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2004
Source Mokdad A H, et al. J Am Med Assoc
199928216, 200128610.
16We Are Not Alone
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18But We Are At The Head Of The Pack!!
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21DIABETES
22Diabetes
which is
23WHY ALL THIS MATTERS
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27The Problem
Metabolic Syndrome
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30Employers Slow to Address 'Metabolic Syndrome'
Despite Sharp Impact on Health CostsAwareness of
the health condition, which is largely
preventable through diet and exercise, remains
low. By Leslie Gross Klaff
- prevalence of metabolic syndrome in Americans
over age 40 has increased by more than 60 percent
in the past decade, according to a report from
the Mayo Clinic. - The average yearly pharmacy cost of treating
adult patients with metabolic syndrome exceeds
4,000. - The syndrome is largely preventable through diet
and exercise, and that's what employers need to
focus on when tackling the health care costs.
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32Res Ipsa Loquitur
33Treating CMR
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40CP1068633-48
41Developing a Treatment Plan for Obesity
- Use a combination of weight loss strategies
- Reduce calories by 500-1,000 calories/day
- Increase physical activity
- Behavior modification
- patient diaries and assessment
- Pharmacotherapy
- Surgery
- Overcome patient and physician treatment barriers
- incentives Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome Work
Group
42Obesity Management
- The ounce of prevention is worth more than the
pound of cure.
- A single bariatric surgery 30,000-41,000
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44Principles Guiding Prevention of Obesity and
Metabolic Syndrome
- Education, Incentives (ownership)
- Compliance and commitment
- Start in childhood
- parents, children, school
- dietary instruction, school lunches
- physical education programs
- organized sports
- more emphasis on participation, fun
- less emphasis on competition, winning
- Intervention
- children 25kg/M2 BMI
- Enlist skilled professionals in this challenge
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46Opportunities
Program design awareness, ownership, compliance,
commitment, school, industry
Health and Exercise Psychology Professionals
Factors influencing motivation, compliance
47Some CMR References
48http//www.medscape.com/viewprogram/4324 http//ww
w.postgradmed.com/issues/2004/07_04/doelle.htm htt
p//www.postgradmed.com/issues/2004/01_04/metaboli
c_resources.htm http//www.postgradmed.com/issues/
2005/11_05/comm_cooppan.htm http//www.americanhea
rt.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier4756
49WHAT WE WANT TO DO
50Our Value Proposition
- AIAG Member Companies Need Better Health Care
Value. Nowhere is this more true than with
Cardio-Metabolic Risk. - AIAG Member Companies Recognize Physicians as
Lynchpins to Achieving Better Value in Health - AIAG Member Companies Believe that
Employer/Provider Relationships are Broken - Us vs. Them
- Misunderstood and Misaligned Incentives
- Lack of Trust
- Too Many Intermediaries