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Doctors still not giving much Healthy Eating
Advice to their Adult Obese Patients
Newswise, May 2010 — Only about half of obese adult
Americans were advised by their doctors to
cut down on fatty foods in 2006, and the
rate had not significantly changed since
2002, according to the latest News and
Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality.
The agency’s survey also found that:
• Obese black and Hispanic adults were less
likely than Whites to receive advice on food
consumption (45 percent and 42 percent,
respectively, compared with 52 percent).
• Poor obese adults were less likely to be
advised to cut down on high-fat, high
cholesterol foods, regardless of race or
ethnicity , 43 percent, compared with 57
percent of higher- income counterparts.
• Obese adults who did not finish high
school also were less likely than those with
a college education to be advised to cut
down on the fat (46 percent versus 53
percent).
Fatty foods add to weight gain and can clog
arteries, thereby increasing a person’s risk
of heart attack or stoke. Black and Hispanic
adults have higher obesity rates than
whites, as do poor adults and those with
limited education.
This AHRQ News and Numbers summary is based
on data from pages 77 to 79 in the 2009
National Healthcare Disparities Report (http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/qrdr09.htm
), which examines the disparities in
Americans' access to and quality of health
care, with breakdowns by race, ethnicity,
income, and education.
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