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Eating at
Buffets plus not exercising equals Obesity
in Rural America
Newswise — In small towns in the Midwestern
United States, people who eat out often at
buffets and cafeterias and who perceive
their community to be unpleasant for
physical activity are more likely to be
obese.
"It's not that people don't want to get
physical activity or eat healthy foods, but
we've made it difficult in many
communities," says Ross Brownson, Ph.D.,
senior author of the study and a professor
at the George Warren Brown School of Social
Work at Washington University in St. Louis.
"People in small towns spend a great deal of
time in cars, and they also may not have
easy access to fresh fruits and vegetables
in their markets."
The findings are published in the December
issue of Preventive Medicine.
Thirty percent of U.S. adults are obese,
which increases their risk for health
conditions such as hypertension, type 2
diabetes, heart disease and stroke.
Rural adults have higher levels of obesity
and are less active in their leisure time
than urban and suburban U.S. adults, says
Brownson, a faculty scholar of Washington
University's Institute for Public Health and
a professor at the School of Medicine.
From July to September 2005, 1,258 randomly
selected adults in 12 rural communities in
Missouri, Arkansas and Tennessee completed
telephone surveys about their food choices
and physical activity. Eligible households
were within two miles of a community walking
trail.
Researchers asked about their access to
produce and low-fat foods, frequency and
location of food shopping and frequency and
location of restaurant dining. They also
were asked how they perceived their
community for physical activity.
The findings revealed that respondents who
ate out often, especially at buffets,
cafeterias and fast food restaurants, were
more likely to be obese.
Those with a high school education or less
reported limited access to fruits and
vegetables and were more likely to shop at
convenience stores.
Additionally, obese participants tended to
have less education and lower annual incomes
than normal weight respondents.
They also were more likely to view their
community as unpleasant for physical
activity, such as lacking sidewalks for
walking or biking or to have few places to
be active.
"Although obesity rates are higher in rural
areas, this is one of the first studies to
look at food choices and exercise in this
population," says Alicia Casey, first author
of the paper and now a doctoral student in
health communications at Penn State
University.
"Determining
how much these factors increase the risk of
obesity in rural areas can help us determine
methods to help this group."
Brownson points out that a lot of travel
planning focuses on how to increase the
numbers of automobiles on our roadways, not
on how to make travel friendly by foot or
bicycle.
Possible interventions to enhance safety for
people who want to walk or bicycle along
rural roads include widening the shoulders,
using signage to identify pedestrian and
cycle areas and reducing speed limits.
Options to increase availability and
affordability of healthy foods could involve
working with food outlet owners and changes
in state or federal taxation and
agricultural policies to reduce the relative
price of healthy foods compared to unhealthy
foods.
Society, Brownson stresses, will be better
off finding ways to prevent obesity instead
of trying to treat the condition.
"We need to take these issues into account
when we're making transportation and city
planning decisions," he says. "Everyone will
benefit if we make the healthy choice the
easy choice."
This study was the third part of a larger
intervention research program that promotes
walking among overweight rural adults.
Called Walk the Ozarks to Wellness, this
research program partnered with local health
agencies and health professionals to
implement promotions that focused on
physical activity and prevention of Type 2
diabetes.
Some of these promotions included fun walks,
walking clubs and charity walks. More than
1,000 residents also were recruited to
receive a health newsletter. Findings from
other aspects of the program are
forthcoming.
This study was funded by the National
Institutes of Health and the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Washington University School of Medicine's
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one of the leading
medical research, teaching and patient care
institutions in the nation, currently ranked
third in the nation by U.S. News & World
Report. Through its affiliations with
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked
to BJC HealthCare.
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