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Are Japense obesity rates really that highSubmitted by fortheinfo on Sat, 06/14/2008 - 12:10am.
One of the things the program eluded to is that costs in Japan are rising, which means there is pressure to increase fees. It would be unpopular, as the Japanese see their doctors more than three times the rate of Americans. I bring this up only to demonstrate the Japanese are active participants in their medical care. It's surprising then that the Japanese have decided the best way to fight obesity is to measure waists. The theory is that those with a higher waist measurement will be at higher risk for diabetes, which the Japanese affectionately call metabo. The Japanese aren't too overweight as a society to start, so it's odd they would choose this as their line in the sand. Putting aside the fallacy of waist measurements as a determining factor of health, it seems like smoking would be the proper thing to go after. The hammer in this situation is that companies would face fines if too many of their workers exceeded 33.5 inches in the waist for men. Think about that measurement. 33.5 inches for me. For women the measurement comes in at 35.4. Amazing. A professor from the Tokai University School of Medicine said it best:
Why would the Japanese do this? I think it's to push more of the healthcare costs onto employers and lessen the government's burden.
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