¶ … socioeconomic status and obesity are related. Indeed, there have been major strides on bringing down the number of obese children. However, the one group that always seems to lag behind the others are racial minorities and the poor and those two are quite often one and the same. Tackling obesity for people of all racial and income levels is important because it brings down the average healthcare costs for everyone as it prevents (or at least slows) conditions like diabetes, heart disease and cancer. This report will only cite articles and studies that appear in academic-level journals and that are stored on EBSCO Host. No internet sources or other material shall be used. While entirely stomping out obesity will not likely happen in our lifetime, there are people that are very much at risk and that would be those with lower socioeconomic status and thus the inability to afford quality healthcare.
Scholarly Literature Review
The main theme that has come forth from this research is that having lower socioeconomic status is strongly linked to obesity. However, one pertinent question is why they are link but it is not always about money, it would seem. One example of this in motion would be the study done by Albaladejo et al. (2014) about whether proximity of sports facilities and risky behaviors is an explanation for whether someone will end up obese or not. Indeed, Albaladejo suggests that there is not a link between the two and that whether those facilities or behaviors are present has little to no bearing on the masses in general when it comes to the lower realms of socioeconomic status. It was basically stated that there was definitely a socioeconomic disparity between the affluent and the poor. However, it did not relate to risky behavior, sports facilities and so forth. They take things a step further and suggest that simply being around such areas even if socioeconomic position is otherwise high is not something that leads to an avoidance of problems. In short, it is more about where someone is rather than how much money they make, although those two are obviously related more often than not (Albaladejo, Villanueva, Navalpotro, Astasio & Regidor, 2014).
Because there seems to be a racial trend when it comes to obesity vs. socioeconomic status, many have found it useful to look at the differences that exist between differing racial groups in seemingly similar situations. Something that clear came through is that white people, even poor white people, tend to do better and more often when it comes to avoiding obesity. The highest performers reflected a count of about 71% white people with blacks and Hispanics splitting the rest. This was true of a study that looked at fifth graders and the precise same disparity between the races continued through at least the seventh grade. The opposite was true when it came to the overall levels of kids that were obese. Only 14.2% of white kids were obese while that number was 27.2 and 22.4 for blacks and Hispanics, respectively. The overall average obesity rate was about 18.7%. In other words, whites dragged down the average while blacks and Hispanics raised it. While it is sometimes flawed, the body mass index (BMI) scale was used to determine obesity or non-obesity. Then again, the number of youth with overly-muscular and non-normal bodies is quite small except for the "early bloomers" that grow taller and more mature more quickly than people in their own age group (Fradkin, Wallander, Elliott, Tortolero, Cuccaro, & Schuster, 2015).
As for the factors that do indeed lead to obesity in the young, regardless of race or background, there are works that have looked at that particular question. One such question was posed in the work of Bryant and Hess (2015). One major cause that is pointed to is the food supply of the United States and how it basically guarantees that the poor will gravitate towards bad food. This leads to adults being overweight as well as the kids. The grownups and the kids are usually eating the same thing and the "bad" stuff is typically cheaper than the "good" stuff. Indeed, one only needs to compare price points at Whole Foods and Wal-Mart to know that first hand. Of course, eating a healthy meal is not just about the caloric intake or a "number on a scale" but is more about eating the right type of fats, eating those fats in the right proportions,...
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