Obesity and the environment

Obesity and the environment aims to look at the different environmental factors that have been determined by researchers to cause and perpetuate obesity.

Environmental obesogens

Studies have shown that obesity has become increasingly prevalent in both people and animals such as pets and laboratory animals.[1] There have been no linkages found between this obesity trend and diet and exercise. According to Professor Robert H. Lustig from the University of California, San Francisco, “[E]ven those at the lower end of the body mass index (BMI) curve are gaining weight. Whatever is happening is happening to everyone, suggesting an environmental trigger.”[2] The theory of environmental obesogens proposes a different causal facet to obesity – that lifetime exposure to xenobiotic chemicals may change the body’s metabolic system. Chemical obesogens are molecules that do not properly regulate lipid metabolism in the body and could therefore promote obesity. Data is scarce, but some in-vitro studies have found this model could be an accurate predictor of future obesity. A study suggested that smoking before and during pregnancy, for example, increases the risk of obesity twofold in children of school age.[3]

Many chemicals that are known or suspected to be obesogens are endocrine disruptors. These obesogens are present in common-use products. In a University at Albany, State University of New York study, organotins were found in a designer handbag, vinyl blinds, wallpaper, tile, and vacuum cleaner dust collected from 20 houses.[4] Phthalates, which have also been linked to obesity, are present in many PVC items in addition to scented items like fresheners, laundry products, and personal care products.[5] Bisphenol A (BPA), is one known environmental obesogen that reduces overall number of fat cells, but makes remaining fat cells larger. Effects of obesogens in animals are the same effects researchers see later in life for low-birth weight babies – glucose intolerance and more abdominal fat.[4] The study concludes that obesogens change an individual’s metabolic set points for gaining weight.[4]

What little research has been conducted on the relationship between chemical exposure and body mass index points to obesogens as a likely contributor to the obesity epidemic. Some endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) belong to this class of compounds. Bruce Blumberg, a professor of developmental and cell biology at UC Irvine, has found compelling evidence that exposure to the chemical Tributyltin (TBT), a compound used in pesticides, can trigger fat cell creation.[6] As several cases have confirmed, many farm workers in America have unwillingly or unknowingly worked in fields that had been recently sprayed with TBT and other dangerous chemicals. Among a wide variety of health risks, farm workers may bear a disproportionate risk of exposure to such obesogens. While legislation has been enacted to require a minimum amount of time to pass before workers enter sprayed fields, the lack of legal and political power of many farm workers combined with the fact that enforcing such laws can be difficult, makes exposure to obesogens a possible threat to the livelihood of many farm workers.

Race

Race and genetics

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), blacks and Hispanics have obesity rates that are 51% and 21% higher than whites, respectively. In most states that underwent examination, blacks had the highest prevalence of obesity, followed by Hispanics, then whites. Many explanations exist to explain the disparity, among which include different behaviors among racial and ethnic groups, differing cultural norms in regards to body weight and size, and unequal access to healthy foods.[7]

Race and genetics are two other dimensions of obesity that have been extensively studied. Some researchers have found that genetics increase the likelihood of occurrence of obesity through higher levels of fat deposition and adipokine secretion.[8] Others think that race itself may affect the way obesity presents itself in individuals. In a recent study of 70,000 men and women of African ancestry, researchers found three new common genetic variants.[9] These single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are connected to body mass index (BMI) and obesity. Therefore, individuals who carry these variants are more at risk of becoming obese. Researchers noted that these genetic variants are but a very small determination in most cases of obesity. It is generally agreed upon by many in the medical community that environmental factors and poor health and eating habits are still considered to be the strongest contributors to obesity.[10]

One study found that black men and women have a lower percentage of body fat than white men and women with the same body mass index (BMI).[11] A similar study concluded that obese black adolescents had significantly less dangerous visceral fat than obese white adolescents. Visceral fat is significant because it has been more strongly linked to the risk of disease as compared to fat stored in other parts of the body.[12]

Race and the built environment

A multitude of studies show that members of racial and ethnic minority communities are disproportionately obese. A recent study in the American Journal of Public Health found a strong correlation between community demographics and the likelihood of inhabitants being obese. In this study, non-Hispanic Blacks (36.1%) and Hispanics (28.7%) were shown to have higher percentages of obesity than non-Hispanic Whites (24.5%) and non-Hispanic Asians (7.1%).[13] One reason for this disparity is that non-Hispanic black and Hispanic communities are often impoverished. As a result, inhabitants often have to rely on cheap calories with little nutritional value. Food deserts are also more likely to be located in these neighborhoods, which limits available food options. Additionally, these communities also tend to have less access to public goods (such as parks). While racial/ethnic minority communities are often impoverished, social standing alone does not explain the disparity between communities. A 2009 study in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health found that racial/ethnic minorities have a higher risk of being obese within each observed socioeconomic group.[14] This finding suggests that race may be a key indicator in determining disparities of obesity risk. The study also implies that structural racism may be causing certain racial/ethnic groups to experience a disproportionate risk, as class alone does not determine the likelihood of a person being obese.

Social perspective: weight bias & stigma

Weight bias is an ongoing field of study that has garnered much more attention in the past few years. There are some studies that focus on obesity-related stigmatization. Multiple academics cite that people who are overweight and obese are thrown into a perpetual cycle of discrimination in employment, healthcare access, and education because negative stereotypes are often attributed to the overweight – laziness, incompetence, weakness of will, sloppiness, and untrustworthiness to name a few.[15]

In one study of 2,249 obese and overweight women, 54% reported experiencing weight stigma from their colleagues and 43% reported experiencing weight stigma from their superiors. Such weight stigma can be defined as derogatory comments, preferential treatment towards normal-weight colleagues, and denial of employment. In another study of 2,838 nationally representative adults aged 25–74, overweight respondents, obese respondents, and severely obese respondents were 12, 37, and 100 times more likely to report employment discrimination than normal-weight respondents, respectively. Studies show that wages can also be reduced. Data suggests that after controlling for other socioeconomic factors, limitations of health, and other household variables, obese men were expected to see a 0.7 to 3.4% wage depression and obese women were expected to see a wage depression between 2.3 and 6.1%.[16]

Studies have also been conducted showing that physicians are most likely to attribute lack of motivation as the primary cause of obesity, coupled with non-compliance and general laziness. In one United Kingdom study, physicians tended to follow a victim-blaming approach about the causes of obesity, while the obese patients themselves attributed their weight to specific medical causes or other socioeconomic factors, such as low income. Disparities in perceived causation have been seen in some circles as a major hindrance towards physicians and patients abilities to come up with a balanced obesity management plan.[16]

Educational weight bias also persists according to a range of studies conducted observing the effects of obesity and educational attainment. A study of over 700,000 Swedish men found that, after controlling for intelligence and parental socioeconomic levels, those who were obese at the age of 18 had a lower chance of going to college than their peers, who were of normal weight. Similarly, a study based on data gathered by the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health concluded that obese women were 50% less likely to attend college than women who were not obese. It was also found in this study that female students who attended school where most of the females were obese had a relatively similar chance of attending college as non-obese women.[16]

Weight bias, fat stigma, and discrimination are factors that many academics say can contribute to hopelessness and depression that may encourage the same unhealthy habits that initially caused obesity[17]

Class-specific obligations

Familial obligations often prevent low-income youth from participating in after-school programs offered in their community. These obligations include, but are not limited to, chores, jobs, family assistance, and household management. A CCLC evaluation found that 50% of non-participating youth could not take part in their programs because of after school responsibilities. Another 28% stated that they could not participate because they were required to take care of their younger siblings after school while their parents were working.[18] As highlighted in a recent brief by the Harvard Family Research Project, “In some evaluations of welfare-to-work programs, the only group of adolescents who experienced gains in participation in formal after school activities were those without younger siblings."[19] Like sibling care, employment is another obstacle that prevents low-income youth from taking advantage of after school programs. Youth from less affluent homes are likely to work longer hours than youth from more affluent homes.[20] According to television broadcast statistics, Hispanic and African-American teen and children are now more targeted by fast food restaurants, Spanish-language advertisement on TV has increased by 8%, and restaurants such as KFC and Burger King have increased their spending on Spanish advertisements from 35% to 41% while decreasing English-language advertising.[21]

Access to space

Between the years 1980 and 2000, obesity rates doubled among young children and tripled among teens. Many studies have been conducted to provide insight into whether genetics are to blame, or economic and environmental circumstances. According to the “thrifty gene hypothesis",[22] a common genetic theory for rising obesity rates is that some people are genetically predisposed to more efficiently metabolize food than others. This is a result of years of human evolution. In times of scarcity, these genes were essential in ensuring survival, and in times of abundance, cause obesity. The thrifty genotype is one theory to explain obesity. The tendency to be sedentary and increasing rates of sugar and fat consumption are also linked to obesity prevalence.

The propensity for children to be less active can be attributed to the accessibility to safe play areas and after school programs, which differ between different socioeconomic classes. Studies have shown that rates of participation in after school programs is similarly low across all socioeconomic groups. Current research shows that this may be due to external factors other than the willingness or need to participate. Research shows that children that come from high-socioeconomic households typically do not participate in after-school programs because they are already involved in a wide range of other activities not funded by the school. Children that come from low-socioeconomic households, however, typically do not participate because of a lack of ability to participate. Lack of transportation is another obstacle to utilizing play spaces and after-school programs.[23][24][25][26] Parents of low-income and minority youth were less likely to report easy access to conveniently located after-school programs, as compared to high-income and white parents.[27] The child's ability to participate in most after school programs is contingent on the parent's ability to drop them off or pick them up. It's very uncommon for after-school programs to have the resources to provide transportation.[28]

Youth face similar problems as young children from disadvantaged families. Poor youth are less likely to have access to a car, and more likely to live in high crime neighborhoods, making it difficult to take public transportation or walk. The CCLC, an after-school program that targets low-income youth, conducted a survey in which 20% of youth reported that the reason they were not able to enroll was not due to lack of desire, but rather their inability to find adequate transportation.[29]

Food access

Federal and national level studies

In 2009, The U.S. Department of Agriculture conducted a “food desert” study to examine access to supermarkets. They found that 23.5 million people within the United States did not have access to a supermarket within a one-mile radius of their residences. More than 113 studies have been conducted to determine if healthy food and supermarkets are equally accessible to every socioeconomic class.[30] 97 of the 113 studies found that supermarkets and healthy food stores are unequally distributed between different socioeconomic groups, 14 of 113 found mixed results, and 2 of 113 found equal distribution. 85% of the studies resulted in the conclusion of unequal distribution between different socioeconomic classes.

Studies in which supermarkets were compared to other food outlets such as small grocery stores and convenience stores were also conducted; in this study supermarkets were used as a proxy for food access, for they provide the most reliable access to a wide variety of nutritious and affordable food. The study showed that low-income and minority communities had less supermarkets and more convenience and small grocery stores as compared to predominantly white and wealthy communities. 89 out of 98 national and local studies have found uneven geographic access to supermarkets in urban areas.

Nationwide studies have concluded that zip codes composed primarily of low-income households are 25% less likely to have a chain supermarket store but contain 1.3 times as many convenient stores when compared to zip codes composed of middle-income households. Zip codes composed of predominantly African-American households have about half the amount of chain supermarkets, as do zip codes composed of predominantly White households.[31] According to an assessment of 685 urban and rural census tracts spanning three states, low-income neighborhoods have approximately half as many supermarkets and four times as many small grocery stores when compared to high-income neighborhoods. The same study also found that predominantly white neighborhoods have four times as many supermarkets as predominantly African-American neighborhoods.[32]

Local level studies

Studies done at the local level demonstrate similar trends to those done at the national level. There are 2.3 times as many supermarkets per household in low-poverty areas in Los Angeles, compared to high-poverty areas. Predominantly white regions have 1.7 times as many supermarkets as Latino regions, and 3.2 times as many as African-American regions.[33] Amongst affluent neighborhoods in Alaska, those composed of predominantly white residents have better access to grocery stores than those composed of predominantly African-American residents, indicating that race may be an element independent of income.[34] West Louisville, Kentucky, a low-income African-American community that suffers from high rates of diabetes, has one supermarket for every 25,000 residents, in comparison to the U.S. average of one supermarket for every 12,500 residents.[35] "In Washington, DC, the city’s lowest income wards (Wards 7 and 8) have one supermarket for every 70,000 people while two of the three highest-income wards (Wards 2 and 3) have one for every 11,881 people. One in five of the city’s food stamp recipients lives in a neighborhood without a grocery store.”[36][37] Twenty-one studies have found that food stores in low-income communities are less likely to stock healthy or fresh food or snacks. These food stores are also more likely to offer lower quality items at higher prices, compared to food stores in predominantly white communities.[38][39][40][41]

Food deserts and obesity

Low income families are more vulnerable to becoming overweight and obese due to the low access of high quality, nutritious food in their neighborhoods. Neighborhoods that lack access to nutritious foods are considered to be food deserts.[42]

Low income neighborhoods and communities of color tend to lack full-service grocery stores. A report issued in 2002 by the Urban and Environmental Policy Institute at Occidental College found out that “middle- and upper-income neighborhoods in Los Angeles had 2.26 times as many supermarkets per capita than in low-income neighborhoods.”[43] Due to the small amount of grocery stores, low-income residents rely on small corner stores for their food and produce. A study that was conducted in 21 of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas found that there are fewer and smaller stores in low-income zip codes than in their wealthier counterparts.[44] Due to the minimal amount of supermarkets located in low-income neighborhoods, people that reside in these neighborhoods have less access to quality food and limited product selection as compared to the selections in wealthier neighborhoods. For example, corner markets in low-income neighborhoods are less likely to offer healthy selections such as whole-grain breads and lower-fat and dairy options.[45]

Low income neighborhoods are burdened with an abundance of fast food outlets. A 2005 study that was conducted in Chicago found that “African-American neighborhoods had 13.7 major fast food restaurants per 100,000 neighborhood residents, while white neighborhoods had 9.4 per 100,000 residents."[46] Fast food restaurants offer inexpensive, calorie-dense food, but that same food is also nutrient-poor and unhealthy, with high levels of sugar, fat, and sodium. According to the USDA recommendation for daily caloric intake, a McDonald’s meal has more than half a day's worth of calories.[47][48] In the short term, the residents of these communities are making an economically rational decision when purchasing fast food as it is easily accessible and inexpensive. The alternative would be purchasing low quality groceries at a high cost.[44] In the long-term however, studies show that the consumption of fast food hurts overall health, raising the probability of becoming obese.[49]

Obesity and the farm bill

Every five to seven years, Congress drafts legislation known as the United States Farm Bill. The farm bill is an umbrella that covers different bills affecting America's agriculture and food. It focuses on two major thrusts: “(1) food stamps and nutritional programs and (2) income and price supports for commodity crops."[50]

The farm bill has been touted as one of the biggest contributors to the ongoing obesity epidemic.[51] Over the past decade the government’s farm policy focused on the overproduction and the reduction in prices of commodity crops such as corn and soybeans. Low commodity prices offer incentives for firms to create new ways to use the commodity crops. The low prices of corn and soybeans led to the creation of high fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated vegetable oils - ingredients that have been linked to obesity. Throughout the years these ingredients have become a major component of everyday food products. In 1998 over 11,000 food products were introduced to Americans. Out of these products about 75 percent of them were candies, condiments, cereals, and beverages-all foods high in added high fructose corn syrup.[52] Over the past thirty years, U.S. consumption of high fructose corn syrup increased over 1,000 percent.[53]

Unhealthy foods tend to be inexpensive when compared to their healthy counterparts. Because fruits and vegetables are not subsidized, the real cost of such crops have risen nearly 40 percent. On the other hand, the prices for soda, sweets, and fats and oils have declined due to the subsidy that the government provides for commodity crops.[54] “Currently the least expensive food available is also the most caloric and the least nutritious: a dollar’s worth of cookies or potato chips yields 1200 calories, while a dollar’s worth of carrots yields only 250 calories."[55]

The farm bill contributes to the low prices that fast food provides because farmers feed the commodity crops to the cows and livestock that people eventually eat. Essential nutrients are taken away when cows are fed corn and/or soybeans instead of their natural grass diet. “Grass-fed beef has been shown to be higher in health-promoting nutrients, omega-3 fatty acids and cancer-fighting conjugated linoleic acid (cla) than beef that is fed grain."[56] Because the government provides a subsidy for the corn and soybeans that feed the cows, they essentially provide a subsidy for grain-fed livestock. As a result, it becomes difficult for farmers to raise grass-fed livestock due to the fact that they have to compete with livestock producers that have a quicker turn-around.

Food movement solutions

Food justice

The food justice movement works to address the obesity epidemic by promoting access to affordable and healthy food to communities. Underlying this discourse is the belief that healthy food is a right of every person regardless of race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, or community. The New York-based non-profit organization Just Food defines food justice as “communities exercising their right to grow, sell, and eat healthy food.”[57] As a potential remedy for obesity, food justice advocates are in favor of providing affordable, quality food through community supported agriculture and the slow food movement.[58] Proponents of the food justice discourse seek to empower historically disadvantaged communities and groups by advocating equal access to healthy food for all people. Some critics of this discourse commend the movement for making healthy food more accessible but are critical of the fact that it does not call into question the structural dynamics that make obesity a likely risk for many of people.[59] It offers alternative food as a solution to obesity but does not consider how food itself is produced and who is involved in production and consumption decisions.

Food sovereignty

The food sovereignty movement seeks to increase empowerment fostered by the food justice movement in addition to addressing structural issues of the food system by advocating for healthy food as a right and for the right of people and countries to actively participate in decisions of food production and consumption (i.e. the food system as a whole). It seeks to empower those most affected and at risk from the obesity epidemic by including them in the process of creating and implementing alternatives to the current food system. Leading food sovereignty organization Via Campesina defines food sovereignty as “the peoples’, countries’, or State Unions’ right to define their agricultural and food policy…”[60] Adopting the food sovereignty discourse is one channel by which to lower the percentage of overweight and obese, particularly in countries that receive food aid and technology from industrialized nations in the form of grain and pesticides containing possible obesogens.

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