Expanding Waists, Decreasing Populations?

July 30th, 2007, 4 Comments »

I listened to the second half of that BBC documentary on obesity that I mentioned. It was equally fascinating, and it got me thinking about the converging problems of increasing global obesity and declining birth rates (the program didn’t cover this particular ground).

Obesity rates are predicted to increase dramatically in the developing world, and certainly aren’t declining in the developed world. As nations develop, their birth rates plummet. Many Western nations are struggling to maintain a replacement birth rate.

Fatter People, Fewer Kids

Overweight and obese women have a harder time conceiving. I went looking for a nice graph that charted increasing weight or BMI (body mass index) to declining fertility, but I came up empty. I was surprised how little hard data on this issue I could find. Either my search skills failed me or there isn’t a ton of useful studies out there to cite. I did find a 2006 article from the University of Adelaide:

“We know that obese women are 2.7 times more likely to be infertile compared to normal women. Obesity rates have doubled in Australia in the last two decades and that is the reason why a lot of women are having trouble falling pregnant or carrying babies to full term.”

Everybody agrees that obesity leads to reduced fertility, but this was the only data point I could find. Maybe Dr. Beth can help?

Compounding the issue, men who are overweight or obese have lower sperm counts and concentrations (focus, spermatozoa, focus!)–their fertility (or should that be virility?) decreases by 20 to 25%.

I wonder how an overweight and obese human race impacts longterm population projections? If we don’t live as long, have a harder time procreating and procreate less as more nations become ‘developed’, maybe we’ll reach that population peak sooner than we think?

And then start a long, slow decline? Wouldn’t that be cool if, by 3007, there were only, say, a billion people on the planet again?

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The Unlikely Problem of Obesity in the Developing World

July 24th, 2007, 7 Comments »

I can’t say enough about these BBC World Service radio documentaries. Each one is fascinating, in-depth and articulate. They come from all over the world (the diversity of accents is a nice bonus), covering a breadth of topics that matter–from the history of the Israel/Palestine conflict to homophobia in Jamaica. They’re served up in 22-minute chunks, but usually have multiple parts.

I just listened to the first episode of Globesity. Paul Bakibinga, an overweight Ugandan, visits South Africa to investigate the vexing, exploding problem of obesity in a developing nation:

With 1.6 billion people overweight worldwide, fat is now recognised as a major global health threat - even in the developing world…

According to the World Health Organisation, there are twice as many overweight as the 800 million who are undernourished.

The program is full of interesting facts. One doctor descries South Africa as now facing a fourth epidemic (after violence, third world diseases like Malaria and HIV/AIDS) of obesity. The phenomenon is worst amongst urban, black women, two-thirds of whom are overweight.

It’s a madly complicated problem. Not only is access to nutritional food unreliable, but there are also AIDS-related and ingrained cultural stigmas against appearing thin. Ironically, many of the overweight people are also undernourished because of their poor diet.

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