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Obesity linked to decreased seatbelt use
Newswise — Obese people are less likely to use their
seatbelts than the rest of the population,
adding to the public health risks associated
with this rapidly growing problem.
The connection was made by Vanderbilt University psychologist
David Schlundt and his colleagues at Meharry
Medical College in Nashville, Tenn.
“We found that when weight goes up, seatbelt use goes down,”
Schlundt, associate professor of psychology
and assistant professor of medicine, said.
“This is an additional public health problem associated with
obesity that was not on the radar screen. We
hope these new findings will help promote
awareness campaigns to encourage people to
use their seatbelts and that additional
resources, like seatbelt extenders, will be
made more readily available.”
Schlundt and his colleagues examined 2002 data from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control’s Behavioral
Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, a telephone
survey used to collect data on risky
behaviors and health decisions associated
with death.
The study found that approximately 30 percent of individuals
with a body mass index (kilograms per meter
squared) that qualified them as overweight,
obese or extremely obese reported not using
a seatbelt, compared to approximately 20
percent of the average population.
Furthermore, seatbelt use declined as BMI increased, with
approximately 55 percent of extremely obese
individuals reporting they did not use a
seatbelt.
The connection between increased body mass index and
decreased seatbelt use held even when
controlling for other factors, such as
gender, race and seatbelt laws in the
respondent’s state.
The scope of the public health problem posed by the lack of
seatbelt use is magnified by the growing
rate of obesity; nearly 60 percent of the
survey respondents fell into the categories
of overweight, obese or extremely obese.
“We know obesity increases the risk of cardiovascular
disease, diabetes and some cancers,”
Schlundt said.
“We now know that increased risk of injury or death due to a
car accident can be added to the list of
risk associated with obesity.”
The authors suggest that a reason why people with a high BMI
do not use seatbelts is because doing so is
uncomfortable.
“Efforts should be made to raise public awareness about
seatbelt extender availability, and
manufacturers not offering seatbelt
extenders should be encouraged, or required,
to make them available,” they wrote.
“Engineering solutions such as seatbelts with wider, more
cushioned bands and greater adjustability
may also be helpful by making seatbelts more
comfortable for overweight and obese
persons.”
Seatbelt usage reduces automobile crash-related deaths and
injuries by at least 50 percent.
The results were published in the November 2007 issue of the
journal Obesity. Schlundt and his
co-authors, Nathaniel Briggs, Stephania
Miller, Carlotta Arthur and Irwin Goldzweig
at Meharry Medical College, are members of
the National Center for Optimal Health. The
research was supported by a grant from State
Farm.