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         Obesity:     more books (100)
  1. Personalized Chinese Herbal Recipes for Weight Loss in Different Types of Obesity (Journal of Chinese Herbal Medicine and Acupuncture)
  2. Obesity: A Reference Handbook (Contemporary World Issues) by Alexandra Kazaks, Judith S Stern, 2009-06-08

141. Enzyme May Be Target For Obesity Drug
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/diet.fitness/12/06/obesity.hormone.reut/index.html

142. Obesity: Assessment And Management In Primary Care - June 1, 2001 - American Fam
Causes of obesity in the United States are complex and multifactorial. Increasingevidence suggests that obesity is not a simple problem of will power or
http://www.aafp.org/afp/20010601/2185.html

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Journals Vol. 63/No. 11 (June 1, 2001)
Obesity: Assessment and Management in Primary Care
JAMES M. LYZNICKI, M.S., M.P.H.,
American Medical Association, Chicago, Illinois
DONALD C. YOUNG, M.D.,
University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa
JOSEPH A. RIGGS, M.D.,
Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
RONALD M. DAVIS, M.D.,
Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, Michigan for the Council on Scientific Affairs, American Medical Association

A PDF version of this document is available. Download PDF now (12 pages / 111 KB). More information on using PDF files. See accompanying editorial
on page 2139.
C auses of obesity in the United States are complex and multifactorial. Increasing evidence suggests that obesity is not a simple problem of will power or self-control but a complex disorder involving appetite regulation and energy metabolism that is associated with a variety of comorbid conditions. Although its etiology is not firmly established, genetic, metabolic, biochemical, cultural and psychosocial factors contribute to obesity. Some individuals may become overweight or obese partly because they have a genetic or biologic predisposition to gain weight readily. In most cases, however, the increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity reflects changes in society and behaviors over the past 20 to 30 years.

143. Obesity Research Center
The New York obesity Research Center at St. Luke sRoosevelt Hospital.
http://www.nyorc.org/

ST.LUKE'S-ROOSEVELT HOSPITAL CENTER

Last Updated: September 02, 2005

144. Right Weigh
Right Weigh helps clinically severe obesity patients with lifestyle changes, education and surgical procedures.
http://www.rightweigh.com
Upcoming free seminars on
Bariatric Surgery
9:00 AM
Special Event

Louisville, KY 1:00 PM
Educational Meeting

Louisville, KY 12:30 PM
Obesity Surgery Seminar

Louisville, KY 9:00 AM
Obesity Surgery Seminar

Louisville, KY 6:30 PM
Nutrition Class
Louisville, KY 7:30 PM Support Group (public welcome) Louisville, KY 6:00 PM Information session Louisville, KY 9:00 AM Obesity Surgery Seminar Louisville, KY 9:00 AM Obesity Surgery Seminar Louisville, KY 6:00 PM Educational Meeting Louisville, KY Click here for entire list. Lap band available in Chicago and Louisville. Insurance doesn't cover? Ask about the package price for lap bandlowest in Midwest. No upfront or administrative fees at any of our centers. Insurance assignment accepted for consults and surgery. Click on image to see the "before" picture. Donna, our program director in Louisville, is the one on the left, in the "before" picture. If you're 100 or more pound s over your ideal weight, you suffer from a disease called clinically severe (or morbid) obesity. It is generally regarded as a life threatening condition that requires treatment. If you're like most people who have this problem, you've tried scores of diets, medications, exercise programs, and even therapy. Nothing has worked.

145. TIME/ABC News Summit On Obesity
obesity is becoming a global health problem. TIME and ABC News, together withthe Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, are bringing together experts in health,
http://www.time.com/time/2004/obesity/
THE TIME/ABC NEWS
SUMMIT ON OBESITY
JUNE 2 - 4, 2004
Presentations from the Summit are now available online. View them on the agenda page or on the bio page. Click here to read TIME's cover package on America's Obesity Crisis.
leaders across sectors and disciplines
As we look to the future and where childhood obesity will be in 20 years... it is every bit as threatening to us as is the terrorist threat we face today. It is the threat from within.
- Vice Admiral Richard Carmona
U.S. Surgeon General
THE SPEAKERS The summit featured dozens of distinguished speakers, including: Andrew Weil, M.D. , Director, Program in Integrative Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arizona Ann M. Fudge Kelly D. Brownell, Ph.D. , Yale Center for Eating and Weight Disorders Lynn C. Swann , Chairman, President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Mike Huckabee , Governor of Arkansas Vice Admiral Richard H. Carmona, M.D. , Surgeon General, USA T. Berry Brazelton, M.D. , Children's Hospital, Boston
Hosted by TIME and ABC News, featuring Peter Jennings

146. LoserGrl Chronicles
A chronicle of the personal struggle with obesity and the process of trying to lose weight.
http://losergrl.blogspot.com/
LoserGrl Chronicles
This blog chronicles my journey from the brink of darkness into the light. Join me as I try to turn loose the thin girl hiding inside myself. As I succeed and as I fail, it will all be posted here for the world to see what it's like to struggle with a weight problem and the process of trying to lose that weight.
The new blog is up and running! You can find it here: http://danicole.com/losergrl/
See You There!!!
-Heather aka Losergrl 3/1/2004 07:07:50 AM DisplayCounts(107814287075886027);
Hi everyone! I have great news!! I am getting ready to move this blog over to my own server and a new blogging software. Keep you eye out here for the new address. I hope to have it posted and running by the end of the weekend.
Until Later
-Heather aka Losergrl 2/28/2004 05:19:16 PM DisplayCounts(107800675624771689);
Early Morning Ruminations
So I'm very proud of myself. I'm trying and that's important.
However... Since I am a daily weigher I can see what the scale is doing. So this morning the scale has me baffled. I'm not upset, just wondering... I think it will be very interesting to continue watching what my body is doing and how it's reacting to this increase in activity.

147. Obesity Tutorial
There are a multitude of health complications from obesity. How does obesity occur? Delicious, calorie dense food + sedentary lifestyle = obesity
http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/TUTORIAL/OBESITY/OBESITY.html
Obesity
Return to the tutorial menu.
General Principles
At the beginning of the 21st century, for the first time in human history, more of the earth's population suffers from too much food, rather than from lack of food. This has resulted in an increasing number of persons who are obese. This is a problem even amongst children. Over half of persons in the U.S. are overweight enough to be defined as obese. This number increased by 50% in the last decade of the 20th century. There are a multitude of health complications from obesity. How does obesity occur? The formula is simple: Food eaten - exercise = weight gained Another way of explaining the situation: Delicious, calorie dense food + sedentary lifestyle = obesity There is ordinarily a modest amount of calories burned to maintain normal body metabolic processes. In general, for a normal healthy adult to maintain body weight with just activities of daily living, caloric intake must be limited to 10 calories (kcal) per pound (22 calories per kg). Thus, a 150 lb (68 kg) person needs about 1500 calories (kcal) per day to avoid gaining weight. Exercise can increase caloric use, and exercise has a "carryover effect" to increase metabolism and burn more calories after exercise. Of course, growing children require more calories. Exercise can burn calories (average for a standard 70 kg person) as follows: Activity (moderate) kcal/minute chewing gum walking cycling dancing ice skating swimming jogging shovelling A good aerobic exercise with cardiovascular benefit is to climb 10 flights of stairs once a day. Just brisk walking for 20 minutes a day can have major benefits.

148. Metabolic Medical Center; A N.E.W. Weigh Of Living
Nutrition, Exercise, and Weight loss with a comprehensive medical approach for the problems associated with obesity.
http://www.metabolicmedicalcenter.com
YOU WILL BE AUTOMATICALLY DIRECTED TO OUR HOME PAGE IN A FEW SECONDS...
CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW AT ANY TIME TO GO DIRECTLY THERE Metabolic Medical Center
570 Long Point Road, Suite 100, Mount Pleasant, SC 29464
Fax (843) 971-1912 2719 Middleburg Drive, Suite 206, Columbia, SC 29204
Fax (803) 758-5855 E-mail: slimdown@metabolicmedicalcenter.com

149. Childhood Obesity. ERIC Digest.
Some data indicate that obesity among children is on the increase. The secondNational Children and Youth Fitness Study found 69 year olds to have thicker
http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9218/obesity.htm
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: Summerfield, Liane M.
Source : ERIC Clearinghouse on Teacher Education Washington DC. Childhood Obesity. ERIC Digest. Between 5-25 percent of children and teenagers in the United States are obese (Dietz, 1983). As with adults, the prevalence of obesity in the young varies by ethnic group. It is estimated that 5-7 percent of White and Black children are obese, while 12 percent of Hispanic boys and 19 percent of Hispanic girls are obese (Office of Maternal and Child Health, 1989). DEFINING OBESITY IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS Obesity is defined as an excessive accumulation of body fat. Obesity is present when total body weight is more than 25 percent fat in boys and more than 32 percent fat in girls (Lohman, 1987). Although childhood obesity is often defined as a weight-for-height in excess of 120 percent of the ideal, skinfold measures are more accurate determinants of fatness (Dietz, 1983; Lohman, 1987). A trained technician may obtain skinfold measures relatively easily in either a school or clinical setting. The triceps alone, triceps and subscapular, triceps and calf, and calf alone have been used with children and adolescents. When the triceps and calf are used, a sum of skinfolds of 10-25mm is considered optimal for boys, and 16-30mm is optimal for girls (Lohman, 1987).

150. CNN.com - Health - Study: Sodas Linked To Obesity - February 15, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/diet.fitness/02/15/soda.obesity/index.html
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Study: Sodas linked to obesity
February 15, 2001 Web posted at: 6:57 p.m. EST (2357 GMT) From staff and wire reports LONDON, England Children who drink sugary soft drinks are at higher risk of becoming obese, researchers in the United States report. Their work, published in the British medical journal The Lancet, is the latest in a string of studies warning that American teenagers are increasingly putting their health at risk by consuming too much junk food. "We found that for every additional serving per day of soft drink consumed, the risk of becoming obese increased by about 50 percent," researcher David Ludwig of Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, told Reuters. MESSAGE BOARD Are you concerned about your child's weight and nutrition? Obesity can lead to heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. The U.S. government has become so concerned about overweight children that last year it issued new growth charts to help parents and doctors identify kids at risk of becoming obese.

151. EMedicine - Obesity : Article By Michael Freemark, MD
obesity obesity is the most prevalent nutritional disorder among children andadolescents in the United States. obesity in childhood and adolescence
http://www.emedicine.com/ped/topic1699.htm
(advertisement) Home Specialties Resource Centers CME ... Patient Education Articles Images CME Advanced Search Consumer Health Link to this site Back to: eMedicine Specialties Pediatrics Nutrition
Obesity
Last Updated: June 17, 2004 Rate this Article Email to a Colleague Synonyms and related keywords: overweight, obese, morbidly obese, fat, adiposity, corpulence, corpulency, body mass index, BMI, hypothalamic obesity, morbid obesity, simple obesity, adolescent obesity, childhood obesity, pediatric obesity AUTHOR INFORMATION Section 1 of 9 Author Information Introduction Clinical Workup ... Bibliography
Author: Michael Freemark, MD , Chief, Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Duke University Medical Center Michael Freemark, MD, is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Pediatrics American Diabetes Association American Federation for Medical Research Endocrine Society ... North Carolina Medical Society , and Society for Pediatric Research Editor(s): Steven Schwarz, MD

152. Guardian Unlimited | Archive Search
The latest scheme is designed to reduce obesity among children. Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4433657,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Newsblog Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football The Guide Jobs Life MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Soulmates dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Feedback Information GNL press office Living our values Newsroom Reader Offers Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Working at GNL Guardian Weekly Money Observer Public Network home UK news World latest Books ... Search McDonald's and Coke fund healthy eating drive Claire Cozens
MediaGuardian.co.uk Friday June 14, 2002
Fast food companies including McDonald's and Coca-Cola are helping to fund a multimillion pound advertising campaign urging Americans to eat more healthily. The campaign follows similar moves by McDonald's to persuade French consumers not to eat too much of its food. In France the fast food giant has run "advertorials" in women's magazines featuring comments about diet and advice from nutritionists. The latest scheme is designed to reduce obesity among children in a country where 60% of the population is classified as overweight or obese, and more than 300,000 deaths each year are attributed to obesity-related illnesses.

153. EMedicine - Obesity : Article By Gabriel I Uwaifo, MBBS
obesity obesity is a significant public health crisis in the United States andthe rest of the developed world. The prevalence is also increasing rapidly
http://www.emedicine.com/MED/topic1653.htm
(advertisement) Home Specialties Resource Centers CME ... Patient Education Articles Images CME Patient Education Advanced Search Consumer Health Link to this site Back to: eMedicine Specialties Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Psychiatry, and Surgery Endocrinology
Obesity
Last Updated: June 17, 2004 Rate this Article Email to a Colleague Synonyms and related keywords: overweight, increased BMI, excess body fat, excess adiposity, increased body mass index, Quetelet index, POMC, MC4, satiety, weight loss, weight gain, gastric bypass AUTHOR INFORMATION Section 1 of 11 Author Information Introduction Clinical Differentials ... Bibliography
Author: Gabriel I Uwaifo, MBBS , Clinical and Research Attending, Assistant Professor of Medicine and Endocrinology, MedStar Clinical Research Center, The MedStar Research Institute and the Washington Hospital Center Coauthor(s): Elif Arioglu, MD , Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of Michigan Gabriel I Uwaifo, MBBS, is a member of the following medical societies:

154. CNN.com - CDC: Medical Cost Of Obesity $75 Billion - Jan. 21, 2004
CNN
http://cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/conditions/01/21/obesity.spending.ap/index.html
International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com
CDC: Medical cost of obesity $75 billion
Story Tools HEALTH LIBRARY Health Library YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Follow the news that matters to you. Create your own alert to be notified on topics you're interested in. Or, visit Popular Alerts for suggestions. Manage alerts What is this? ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) Taxpayers foot the doctor's bill for more than half of obesity-related medical costs, which reached a total of $75 billion in 2003, according to a new study. The public pays about $39 billion a year or about $175 per person for obesity through Medicare and Medicaid programs, which cover sicknesses caused by obesity including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, several types of cancer and gallbladder disease. The study, to be published Friday in the journal Obesity Research, evaluates state-by-state expenditures related to weight problems. The research was done by the nonprofit group RTI International and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Obesity has become a crucial health problem for our nation, and these findings show that the medical costs alone reflect the significance of the challenge," said Tommy Thompson, secretary for the Department of Health and Human Services. "Of course, the ultimate cost to Americans is measured in chronic disease and early death."

155. Healthfinder® - Obesity
healthfinder® obesityCarefully selected government and nonprofit health information on obesity.
http://www.healthfinder.gov/scripts/SearchContext.asp?topic=592

156. CNN.com - Get Thin, Get Pregnant - July 2, 2002
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/07/01/obesity.fertility/index.html
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Get thin, get pregnant
Dyce-Lovelace calls her surgery "forced behavior modification." From Elizabeth Cohen CNN Medical Unit NEW YORK (CNN) After five years of trying, Tanya Dyce-Lovelace finally had a baby. "I remember my mother said to me one day, 'Well, maybe you're not supposed to be a mom maybe you're supposed to be an aunt,'" says Dyce-Lovelace. But she refused to accept it. "I believe in the heavenly father and so long as there is one, I will have a child," she said. Dyce-Lovelace didn't do in-vitro or any of the fertility drugs we've all heard about. She did something new, something on the cutting edge: She had her stomach stapled. She went from 270 to 208 pounds. She got pregnant with Clarence on the first try. And then about a year and a half later, Adia was born. Dr. Mitchell Roslin at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City did Tanya's surgery. He explains that obesity can cause serious hormonal imbalances in some women. Such imbalances can mean no pregnancy for some women.

157. Patient Resources Obesity
for patients or friends/parents of patients diagnosed with obesity. Medical Newsand Alerts. obesity Information. Discussion Groups and Newsgroups
http://www.pslgroup.com/OBESITY.HTM

158. CNN.com - More Obese Choose Stomach Stapling - Dec. 1, 2003
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/HEALTH/diet.fitness/12/01/obesity.surgery.ap/index.html
International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com
More obese choose stomach stapling
Number of procedures nearly quadruple in 5 years
Story Tools RELATED Interactive: Downsizing surgery How it's done
Obese teens turn to surgery
Hospital halts stomach-staple operations after death HEALTH LIBRARY Health Library Surgery for obesity Popular weight control methods YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Obesity Stomach stapling Gastric-bypass or Create your own Manage alerts What is this? BOSTON, Massachusetts (AP) Ken Powers knew the potential dangers of having his stomach stapled, but to a man who had tipped the scales at 475 pounds, those risks didn't much matter. "I had this thought: If I die on the operating table, having the surgery to try to better my life, I thought it was a better thing to do than to live the way I was living, which, in my opinion, I was kind of waiting to die anyway," he said. By the tens of thousands, morbidly obese people who have failed at diets, support groups and exercise programs are turning to surgery to lose weight. In 1998, there were 25,800 obesity-related operations, most of them gastric-bypass procedures commonly known as stomach stapling. This year, the American Society for Bariatric Surgery estimates 103,200 operations.

159. NSW Health: Child Obesity

http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/obesity/

160. Why Americans Are Losing The Fat Fight
CNN
http://cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/03/25/obesity.conference.reut/index.html

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