firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
[personal profile] firecat
I asked a very prominent epidemiologist at the CDC [Centers for Disease Control] about the latest study that came out in March, claiming that 400,000 deaths a year are a result of poor diet and a lack of activity level. I asked her how accurate that number was, and off the record -- because she wants to keep her job -- she said, "I think it's pretty accurate with a margin of error plus or minus 400,000 deaths a year."


From an article by Paul Campos, the author of The Obesity Myth, on salon.com. You have to view an ad to see the article (one of today's ads is from the ACLU), or you could check out http://bugmenot.com to see if they have any registration info for Salon.

Date: 29 Jun 2004 09:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
woo!

thanks for posting the link; i subscribe, but i missed the article somehow.

Date: 29 Jun 2004 10:02 am (UTC)
snippy: Lego me holding book (Default)
From: [personal profile] snippy
Nice. I especially appreciate how he repeatedly says there's no or at best weak scientific evidence for most hysteria about weight, and that the *scientists* who are hysteric about it have eating disorder ideation.

Changing the emphasis to fitness would be so beneficial for so many people. Not only is it more achievable, being fitter would actually make a difference in their health and lifespan.

Date: 29 Jun 2004 10:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keryx.livejournal.com
Paul can totally be my new boyfriend. ;) Thanks for posting that. Now I can get people to read that article to convince them they want to buy his book. Have you read the book? I think it's what the size acceptance movement needed to convince people in the middle (minus, possibly, the Bill-Monica chapter).

Date: 29 Jun 2004 10:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] leback.livejournal.com
That's a great article--thanks!

I liked the ad, too--I'm glad you noted the source, as it meant I actually paid attention for once. :-)

Date: 29 Jun 2004 10:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
I end up going through the ads for Salon pretty much every day. I'd consider getting a subscription, but most of the time I just click for the free day pass and read stuff in another tab. By the time I'm ready to switch back, the ad is done. :)

I think that as important as changing the way people think about the hysteria is changing the incredibly solid links people have managed to acquire over the last while between "fat" and "poor diet and lack of activity level." They don't always go hand-in-hand.

Date: 1 Jul 2004 07:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
Even I fall prey to the latter one often, which is silly and ridiculous. Lately I've been fighting a lot of self-image problems, mostly surrounding my body image, and because I'm bigger than I was a couple of years ago and remain that way even when I exercise regularly, I do let it get to me sometimes, and I'll get discouraged and exercise less. The silliest part of it is that when I felt best, fitness wise, is when I was cycling just for the joy of cycling and not for any weight loss idea or any other side benefit. I want to get back into that state of mind, but I've just been on a body-image downer for a while, and every time I get dressed for work and my work shirts are tighter and less comfortable (they still fit, because I was the same size as I am now when I bought them, but I was about sixty pounds lighter for about a year and I was swimming in my clothes) than I'm used to, it's a reminder. I saw the trailer for Garden State the other day, and there's a point where the guy is wearing this lovely charcoal grey oriental embroidered shirt. I thought, "I have that shirt (only in burgundy)!" Then I remembered that I got in in Hawaii when I was much thinner than I am now, and it was such a tight fit then that I took all kinds of extreme measures to get into it. (It was part of a wedding party outfit.) When I realized that I might never get to wear it again, I was completely bummed out all night. (The experience of wearing it at the time was trying in and of itself -- I didn't get to try it on until the day before, so I was continually stressed that it wouldn't fit. It was the very largest size the company would make, and I *BARELY* got myself into it, and the antics that went into that were rather extreme. All the other people in the wedding party were professional models and such. I was probably close to three times many of their weights)

Date: 1 Jul 2004 07:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
Even I fall prey to the latter one often, which is silly and ridiculous. Lately I've been fighting a lot of self-image problems, mostly surrounding my body image, and because I'm bigger than I was a couple of years ago and remain that way even when I exercise regularly, I do let it get to me sometimes, and I'll get discouraged and exercise less. The silliest part of it is that when I felt best, fitness wise, is when I was cycling just for the joy of cycling and not for any weight loss idea or any other side benefit. I want to get back into that state of mind, but I've just been on a body-image downer for a while, and every time I get dressed for work and my work shirts are tighter and less comfortable (they still fit, because I was the same size as I am now when I bought them, but I was about sixty pounds lighter for about a year and I was swimming in my clothes) than I'm used to, it's a reminder. I saw the trailer for Garden State the other day, and there's a point where the guy is wearing this lovely charcoal grey oriental embroidered shirt. I thought, "I have that shirt (only in burgundy)!" Then I remembered that I got in in Hawaii when I was much thinner than I am now, and it was such a tight fit then that I took all kinds of extreme measures to get into it. (It was part of a wedding party outfit.) When I realized that I might never get to wear it again, I was completely bummed out all night. (The experience of wearing it at the time was trying in and of itself -- I didn't get to try it on until the day before, so I was continually stressed that it wouldn't fit. It was the very largest size the company would make, and I *BARELY* got myself into it, and the antics that went into that were rather extreme. All the other people in the wedding party were professional models and such. I was probably close to three times many of their weights.)

I also heart Paul Campos

Date: 29 Jun 2004 01:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eve-l-incarnata.livejournal.com
Overconsumption in America is closely equated with class: The higher up you go the more you consume. The only area in which consumption is inversely related to class is caloric overconsumption. So the American elite project anxiety about the fact that they're massively overconsuming economically and materially through a disgust for fat, lower-class people. --- Paul Campos

Great minds read some of the same feeds?

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