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Showing posts with label BMI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BMI. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 April 2025

Indian pot belly: From status symbol to silent killer

 

Soutik Biswas

India correspondent@soutikBBC  9 hours ago

The Indian pot belly - once a badge of prosperity, indulgence and aging respectability - has long been a target of satire and social commentary.



In literature, it quietly signalled comfort or complacency; in films, it became a shorthand for the lazy official, gluttonous uncle, or a corrupt policeman. Cartoons exaggerated it to mock politicians. In rural settings, it was once considered a status symbol - a sign that "this man eats well".


But what was once dismissed or even celebrated is now raising alarm bells. The obesity crisis in India is ballooning - and the seemingly harmless pot belly may be a far bigger villain than we think.


India had the second-highest number of overweight or obese adults in 2021, with 180 million affected - behind only China. A new Lancet study warns this number could soar to 450 million by 2050, nearly a third of the country's projected population.


Globally, more than half of all adults and a third of children and adolescents are expected to face the same fate.


At the heart of this issue in India lies the pot belly, or in medical terms, abdominal obesity.


This form of obesity refers to the accumulation of excess fat around the belly and doctors say it's more than a cosmetic concern. As far back as the 1990s, studies showed a clear link between belly fat and chronic conditions like Type 2 diabetes and heart disease.


Obesity isn't just abdominal. It appears in different patterns, depending on fat distribution: peripheral obesity affects the hips, thighs, and buttocks, while generalised obesity involves fat spread more evenly across the body.


The numbers on abdominal obesity in India are already troubling. According to the latest National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5) - which, for the first time, measured waist and hip sizes - about 40% of women and 12% of men in India have abdominal obesity.


Abdominal obesity, based on Indian guidelines, means a waist over 90cm (35 inches) for men and 80cm (31 inches) for women. Among women aged 30 to 49, nearly one in two already show signs of it. Urban populations were found to be more affected than rural ones, with high waist circumference or waist-to-hip ratios emerging as a key red flag.



So why is belly fat such a big deal?


One reason is insulin resistance - a condition where the body stops responding properly to insulin, the hormone that helps regulate blood sugar. Abdominal fat disrupts how the body uses insulin, making it harder to control blood sugar.


Studies have found South Asians, including Indians, tend to have more body fat than white Caucasians at the same Body Mass Index. (BMI is a simple measure of body fat based on a person's weight in relation to their height.)


It's not just how much fat you have - it's where it goes. In South Asians, fat tends to collect around the trunk and under the skin, but not always deep in the abdomen as visceral fat.


Though South Asians may have less of the more harmful deep abdominal fat around organs like the liver and pancreas, studies show their larger, less efficient fat cells struggle to store fat under the skin. As a result, excess fat spills into vital organs that regulate metabolism - like the liver and pancreas - raising the risk of diabetes and heart disease.

India, China, and the USA lead eight nations housing over half the world's overweight and obese population

Scientists still don't fully understand the biological reasons behind the fat distribution patterns. Though numerous genetic studies have been conducted, no single gene has consistently explained this tendency.


One theory offers an evolutionary root. India, for centuries, was wracked by famines and chronic food shortages, leaving generations to survive on meagre nutrition.


In such conditions, the human body adapted for survival in extreme scarcity.


The body needed a depot for this energy and the abdomen, being the most expandable area, became the prime storage site. Over time, as food became more plentiful, this fat store continued to grow - eventually to harmful levels.


"It's a conjectural but plausible evolutionary theory - one that can't be proven, but makes sense," says Anoop Misra, who heads Delhi's Fortis-C-DOC Centre of Excellence for Diabetes, Metabolic Diseases and Endocrinology.


Last year, in a paper doctors belonging to the Indian Obesity Commission redefined obesity guidelines for Asian Indians, moving beyond BMI to better reflect how body fat relates to early health risks.


They created a two-stage clinical system that considers fat distribution, related diseases and physical function.


Stage one involves a high BMI, but without abdominal obesity, metabolic disease, or physical dysfunction. In such cases, lifestyle changes like diet, exercise and sometimes medication are usually enough.


Stage two includes abdominal obesity - the harmful visceral fat - and is often accompanied by health issues like diabetes, knee pain or palpitations. This stage signals higher risk and calls for more intensive management.



This classification guides treatment intensity. Once belly fat appears, early action is key - new weight loss drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide are proving effective at targeting it, doctors say.


"As shocking as it may sound, even people with a normal weight can have dangerous levels of belly fat," says Dr Misra.


Indian physicians say abdominal obesity is rising due to lifestyle changes - more junk food, takeaways, instant meals and greasy home cooking. Between 2009 and 2019, Cameroon, India and Vietnam saw the fastest growth in per capita sales of ultra-processed foods and beverages, studies found.


So, what needs to be done?


Experts say Indians need tougher lifestyle changes than Western norms recommend. While 150 minutes of weekly exercise may suffice for their European men, their South Asians counterparts need around 250–300 minutes to offset slower metabolism and less efficient fat storage, studies show.


"Our bodies simply aren't as good at handling excess fat," says Dr Misra.


In short, the pot belly isn't just a punchline - it's a warning sign. And India is sitting on a ticking health time bomb.


https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czjnd4rzmglo

Friday, 7 April 2017

Overweight young men have twice the risk of liver disease

Young men who are overweight or obese have up to double the risk of normal-weight peers for developing liver disease later in life, a large study in Sweden suggests.


Overweight young men have twice the risk of liver disease
Liver disease raises if you're young and have diabetes, says new study. Photo: 123rf.com

APRIL 7, 2017
BY AGENCY
If the young men also had type-2 diabetes, their risk of having liver disease by the time they reached middle age was as much as 3.3 times higher, researchers report in the journal Gut.
Past studies have shown that diabetes raises risk for liver disease and liver cancer, but the current study indicates that having a high body mass index (BMI), a measure of weight relative to height, is a risk factor on its own.
“A high BMI early in life in men is associated with an increased risk of developing severe liver disease later in life, and this cannot be explained by a high alcohol consumption or viral hepatitis,” lead study author Dr Hannes Hagstrom said.
“Also, this risk was highly increased in those men who contracted type-2 diabetes during the follow-up, independent of the baseline BMI,” said Hagstrom, a researcher with the Center for Digestive Diseases at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm.
The study team analysed records for 1,220,261 men who had physicals when they were drafted into the Swedish army between 1969 and 1996 and were 17 to 19 years-old at the time. Using national health registries, the researchers followed the men until 2012.
They grouped men according to BMI, which is measured as kilograms per square metre. Normally, a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered a healthy weight, while 25 to 29.9 is overweight, 30 or above is obese and 40 or higher is what’s known as morbidly obese. In the current study, researchers reduced the healthy range to BMIs between 18.5 and 22.5, and used men in that group as the basis for comparisons with all the others.
When the men were drafted, the average BMI was 21.5, and just 100,000 men were in the overweight range and 20,000 qualified as obese. But rates of obesity differed across the original enlistment period, the researchers note. In 1969, about 6% of men were overweight and less than 1% were obese, but by 1996, 12% of young men were overweight and almost 3% were obese.
Over the follow-up period, 5,281 men developed severe liver diseases, including cirrhosis and liver failure, and 251 were diagnosed with liver cancer.
When compared to men with BMIs less than 22.5 at baseline, the risk of severe liver disease increased as BMIs went up: men in the overweight category had about 50% increased risk of liver disease and obese men had a two-fold increased risk. Excluding men with a diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease from the analysis raised the risk associated with obesity slightly higher still.
“Although we cannot know for sure, we speculate that these men had or developed non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and that this in some cases led to severe liver disease,” Hagstrom said.
When they looked at liver cancer, the researchers found that men who were overweight at baseline had about a 60% increase in risk, while the risk was more than tripled for men who were obese.
Hagstrom said physicians should know overweight and obese teenage boys are at an increased risk for future severe liver disease, and that intervention early in life likely is necessary to reduce this risk.
“Obesity is an important risk factor for a number of types of cancer. Liver cancer is one of those,” Karen Basen-Engquist said.
“This study shows that even obesity in early adulthood is associated with later risk. It’s important for us to try to maintain a healthy weight all through our lives,” said Basen-Engquist, director of the University of Texas MD Anderson’s Center for Energy Balance in Cancer Prevention and Survivorship in Houston.
Basen-Engquist, who was not involved in the study, said doctors and researchers need to keep getting that message out because a lot of people aren’t aware of the link between obesity and cancer. “A lot of people know about smoking and cancer, but they don’t think about obesity and cancer risk.” – Reuters/Shereen Lehman
http://www.star2.com/health/wellness/2017/04/07/overweight-young-men-have-twice-the-risk-of-liver-disease/

Saturday, 1 October 2016

Coke Is a Joke: Alarming Aspartame Facts Infographic


aspartame side effects
The "Coke Is a Joke" infographic exposes the false weight loss and wellness claims of Coke in its diet soda line, which uses aspartame and other artificial sweeteners. 

http://www.mercola.com/infographics/coke-is-a-joke.htm

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Why having a pot belly 'is a bigger heart risk than obesity'

Having a pot belly – even if you are not overweight – poses a greater risk of death from heart problems than being generally obese, warn doctors.

A ‘spare tyre’ around the waist is uniquely dangerous because it is packed with ‘bad fat’, research shows.



The US study found that those who were not overweight but had a bulging midriff were 2.75 times more at risk of dying from cardiovascular disease than normal weight and a proportionate waistline.

'Spare tyre': A pot belly is uniquely dangerous because it is packed with 'bad fat', doctors say
'Spare tyre': A pot belly is uniquely dangerous because it is packed with 'bad fat', doctors say

They were also at 2.08 times the risk of dying prematurely from all causes.

Most strikingly, people with a healthy overall weight but too much abdominal fat were even more likely to be heart victims than generally obese people, whose risk was 2.34 times more than those of normal weight with a regular waistline.

Middle-aged spread – known as central obesity – is partly responsible for the development of heart disease and diabetes.


Fat packed around the organs in the abdomen is more dangerous than fat on the hips because it’s ‘metabolically active’, releasing more of the inflammatory, toxic chemicals that raise heart disease risk.

Many experts now want waist circumference or waist-to-hip ratio, which indicates levels of abdominal fat, adopted as a more accurate guide than body mass index (BMI), which relates weight to height.

Problem: People with a healthy overall weight but too much abdominal fat were even more likely to be heart victims than generally obese people, researchers found
Problem: People with a healthy overall weight but too much abdominal fat were even more likely to be heart victims than generally obese people, researchers found
Dr Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, senior author on the study and a cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said: ‘We knew from previous research that central obesity is bad, but what is new in this research is that the distribution of the fat is very important even in people with a normal weight.

‘This group has the highest death rate, even higher than those who are considered obese based on BMI. From a public health perspective, this is a significant finding.’ 

The latest study looked at data on 12,785 people aged 18 and over, who were divided into three categories of BMI – normal, overweight and obese – then divided by whether waistlines were normal or larger.

Over 14 years, there were 2,562 deaths, of which 1,138 were cardiovascular-related.

The highest risk of death was in people with normal BMI and large waistlines.

Dr Karine Sahakyan, who is a cardiology research fellow at the Mayo Clinic, presented the findings yesterday at the European Cardiology Congress in Munich.

Dr Lopez-Jimenez added: ‘Our research shows that if a person has a normal BMI, this by itself should not reassure them that their risk for heart disease is low.

'Where their fat is distributed on their body can mean a lot, and that can be determined easily by getting a waist-to-hip measurement, even if their body weight is within normal limits.’


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2194506/Why-having-pot-belly-bigger-heart-risk-obesity.html


This post is on Healthwise

Friday, 17 October 2014

Obesity risks

1 October 2014

Steve Yap

This post is on Healthwise


THE World Health Organisation ranks Malaysia as the country with the highest number of obese people in Southeast Asia.
Whatever the reasons for this sad state of affair, obesity promotes numerous chronic metabolic health disorders such as inflammation, oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction (arterial damage), high blood pressure, abnormal blood fats, insulin resistance ­(­pre-­diabetes), hyperglycaemia (high blood sugar), diabetes type 2, and even cancer.
There’re some 3,500 calories in just one pound of body fat. With weight loss, only the size of fat cells is reduced, while the number of fat cells remains the same.
One way to burn off excess calories is to monitor our basal metabolic rate (BMR). This represents the number of calories we burn in 24 hours while at rest.
To calculate BMR for men, take the body weight times 11 while for women is body weight times 10. The higher one’s BMR, the more calories one burns.
BMR may be raised by ­regular ­exercise, consuming a ­ketogenic or higher protein diet, or having regular servings of seaweed while keeping refined carbohydrates/sugar ­consumption rather slow.
Virgin coconut oil raises BMR while cooking oils such as corn, sunflower or soy may lower it.
Body fats around the ­abdomen (central obesity) is considered most unhealthy.
Accumulation of triglycerides (stored fats from carbs/sugars/fruits) contributes significantly to the waist circumference, which is a stronger predictor of cardiovascular risk, metabolic syndrome and total ­mortality than even the widely-used body mass index (BMI).
Most Asian populations have a higher percentage of body fat, and so have a higher risk of heart disease and diabetes type 2, compared to people of European origin with same BMI.
BMI of higher than 27 is generally regarded as being obese since for Southeast Asians and South Chinese, the upper limit for ideal BMI is 23.
BMI is not an accurate measure for muscular athletes and those with significantly ­different body size frames. It tends to overstate fatty tissues of those with greater lean body mass while understates excess fatty tissues in those with lower lean body mass.
The higher the percentage of body fat, the lower the percentage of body water since water isn’t stored in fat cells.
Healthy adults would have around 60% to 65% water by body weight compared to as low as 40% water in obese adults. Body water in infants is as high as 75%.
The numerous roles water plays include creating saliva, removing metabolic toxins/waste products, regulating blood pressure and heart rate, lubricating joints and cartilages, as well as transporting nutrients and oxygen to cells.
Water is certainly the most important nutrient our body needs. Without adequate water intake, our organs become dysfunctional.
Symptoms of dehydration include dry skin, constipation, headaches, dizziness, fatigue, rapid heartbeat, hypotension, unable to sweat, mood ­disorder, and feeling ‘heaty’.
Most arterial plaques ­consist of a higher percentage of ­oxidised dietary fats compared to modified cholesterol.
Fats in the form of polyunsaturates – such as that from corn oil, sunflower oil, starflower oil, or even soy oil – are most easily oxidised.
Current research suggests that fats glycated by dietary sugar become modified and are acted upon by our ­immune system which treats them as ­‘aliens’ molecules to be ­attacked leading to chronic low-grade inflammation.
The higher your fat intake, the lower is your body’s ability to cope with sugar or refined starch leading to early onset of diabetes type 2.
Chronic low-grade ­inflammation is being implicated in almost all major chronic health disorders including heart disease.
Atherosclerosis is now recognised as an inflammatory disorder. The plant flavonoid, ­luteolin, can lower the IL-6 levels. Its natural sources include chilli padi, green chili, spring onion, bell pepper, celery, artichoke, cabbage, broccoli, thyme, and other spices.
Visceral fats also produce pro-inflammatory chemicals that set the stage for many major metabolic disorders and endocrine dysfunction (hormone imbalance).
Besides sugar/refined carbs, food items high on the inflammatory index include organ meat, farmed salmon, and fatty tissues from farmed livestock/animal.
Surprisingly, many Malaysians avoid seafood with the lowest inflammatory indices such as squids (sotong), scallops, anchovies, oysters, fish roe, clams and mussels, thinking they’re ‘harmful’ to the heart.
Fructose (fruit sugar) is considered more harmful to the heart than table sugar despite its acclaimed lower glycaemic index.
It promotes insulin ­resistance which is a rather strong independent ­predictor of cardiovascular disease. ­
Fructose also lowers body’s production of the appetite-­suppressing hormone leptin. This means that habitually eating fruits before main meal can lead to excessive weight (fat) gain.
The most effective natural way to lower triglycerides is with EPA/DHA while maintaining a healthy thyroid function through regular exercise.
EPA/DHA also helps lower fatty liver while zinc ­citrate reduces oestrogenic ­effects of obesity.
Other nutrients to help raise lean body mass include soy isolate, creatine, hydroxyl-critic acid, and branched-chain amino acids.
Having adequate sleep and lowering stress can help too.


Go to Healthwise for more articles

Friday, 25 November 2011

People with early Alzheimer's 'more likely to have low BMI'

 
Last updated 22 November 2011



Scientists have found that people in the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease may be more likely to have a low body mass index (BMI) than those who are dementia-free.

Researchers at the University of Kansas School of Medicine in the US studied 506 people, using advanced brain imaging techniques and analyses of their cerebrospinal fluid to look for signs of Alzheimer's disease.

Participants included a range of people, from those with no memory problems to individuals with Alzheimer's disease.

The researchers discovered that people with no memory problems who had biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease were more likely to have a low BMI than those without the biomarkers.

Study author Dr Jeffrey Burns, whose findings are published in Neurology journal, said: 'These results suggest Alzheimer's disease brain changes are associated with systemic metabolic changes in the very earliest phases of the disease.

'This might be due to damage in the area of the brain called the hypothalamus that plays a role in regulating energy metabolism and food intake.'

Dr Anne Corbett, research manager at the Alzheimer's Society, said that it is not yet clear whether a low BMI is part of Alzheimer's disease or a side-effect of the illness.

She added that more work is needed before scientists can say for sure whether the findings could be used to develop better ways of diagnosing the early stages of Alzheimer's.ADNFCR-554-ID-801217927-ADNFCR


http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/interactive/news/people-with-early-alzheimers-more-likely-to-have-low-bmi--id801217927-t116.html

Seniors urged to maintain high-quality diet

All health news »
 
Last updated 24 November 2011





Older people should ensure they have a healthy and balanced diet to prevent a range of health problems, it has been claimed.

Laura Williams, a diet and fitness expert, said that milk, yoghurt and cheese provide a good source of calcium, which is important to maintain bone health.

Red meat is also a valuable part of the diet, as it can help to prevent anaemia - a common problem in older people.

Fibre is another dietary component that should not be neglected in later life, as this reduces the risk of constipation and digestive complaints. Fibre-rich foods include fruit, vegetables, whole grains and beans.

Ms Williams noted: 'High-fat or sweet and salty foods can be tempting, especially if you're suffering with a poor appetite, but there can be risks involved if too much poor-quality food is eaten.

'Excess salt can raise blood pressure and cause water retention, while an excess of saturated fat can have a detrimental effect on heart health.'

The expert made her comments after a study in Neurology journal found that people in the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease are more likely to have a low body mass index (BMI) than those who are free from dementia.ADNFCR-554-ID-801220567-ADNFCR


http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/interactive/news/seniors-urged-to-maintain-high-quality-diet--id801220567-t116.html

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Underweight People at Higher Post-Surgery Risk

CHICAGO (Reuters) - People who are underweight have a 40 percent higher risk of dying in the first month after surgery than patients who are overweight, according to new research released on Monday ...

By Julie Steenhuysen | November 22, 2011 2:41 PM GMT

The findings suggest that body mass index, or BMI, may be useful in predicting which patients are at the greatest risk while recovering from surgery, U.S. researchers reported in the Archives of Surgery.

Prior studies looking at the role of BMI in surgery have been mixed, said George Stukenborg of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, who worked on the study.

"Patients with low BMI are at higher risk of death 30 days after surgery," Stukenborg said in a telephone interview.

The researchers used data on nearly 190,000 patients who underwent a variety of surgeries at 183 hospitals between 2005 and 2006.

BMI is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by height in meters squared. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with a BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 are normal weight, those with a BMI of 25 to 29.9 are overweight, and those with a BMI of 30 and above are obese.

To look for a link between body weight and the risk of death, they classified patients into five groups or quintiles: people with a BMI of less than 23.1; people with a BMI of 23.1 to less than 26.3; people with a BMI of 26.3 to less than 29.7; people with a BMI of 29.7 to less than 35.3; and people with a BMI of 35.3 or higher.

Overall, 2,245 or 1.7 percent of people in the study died within 30 days of surgery.

"We found patients in the lowest quintile had a 40 percent higher odds of death compared to the mid-range," said Stukenborg, referring to people in the overweight category with BMIs of 26.3 to 29.7.

Even when the researchers adjusted for type of surgery and other risk factors, those with a low BMI still had a greater risk of dying in the first month after surgery compared with plumper surgery patients.

Stukenborg said it is not clear why. The study did not track recent weight loss, so it could be that people who weighed less were sicker to begin with.

"That is a possibility," he said.

Either way, Stukenborg said doctors should consider BMI when they plan surgeries for their patients.

Being overweight or obese carries many other risk, raising chances of heart disease, diabetes, some cancers, arthritis and other conditions. Obesity-related diseases account for nearly 10 percent of medical spending in the United States or an estimated $147 billion a year.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)


http://uk.ibtimes.com/articles/254061/20111122/underweight-people-higher-post-surgery-risk.htm

Body weight affects risk of death among Asians

New research shows body weight affects risk of death among Asians

By Medical Daily Reporter
February 28, 2011 Monday - 10:09 pm EST   

A study of more than 1 million Asians found that those who were a normal weight were far less likely to die from any cause than individuals whose body-mass index (BMI) was too high or low. A similar association was seen between BMI and the risk of death from cancer, cardiovascular disease or other causes.


The study, led by Wei Zheng, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., Ingram Professor of Cancer Research at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, Tenn., Paolo Boffetta, M.D., M.P.H., professor, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, N.Y., and John D. Potter, M.D., Ph.D., member and senior adviser, Public Health Sciences Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash., was published in this week's issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.

"Previous studies that evaluated the association between BMI and the risk of death have been conducted primarily in populations of European descent, and the current definition of overweight and obesity is based essentially on criteria derived from those studies," said Zheng, director of the Vanderbilt Epidemiology Center. "The validity of these criteria in Asian populations has yet to be determined. A large proportion of Asians are very thin and the impact of a severely low BMI on the risk of death has not been well evaluated until now."

The World Health Organization estimates that more than 1 billion adults worldwide are overweight and at least 300 million are obese. Fat tissue has been recognized as an active endocrine organ, capable of releasing a number of biologically active factors that may contribute to obesity-related diseases, including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, coronary artery disease, stroke and several types of cancer.

The research, conducted as part of the Asia Cohort Consortium, included health status and mortality information on more than 1.1 million individuals from East and South Asia. In the cohorts of East Asians, including Chinese, Japanese and Koreans, the lowest risk of death was seen among individuals with a BMI in the range of 22.6 to 27.5, which is considered normal to slightly overweight (BMI is defined as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters).

Chinese, Japanese and Korean populations were much like groups in other parts of the world. These East Asians with a raised BMI of 35.0 or higher had a 50 percent higher risk of death. The same was not true for Indians and Bangladeshis, indicating that a high BMI did not affect all ethnic groups in a similar way.

Being severely underweight was even more dangerous among all of the Asian populations studied. The risk of death was increased by a factor of 2.8 among those whose BMI was very low, that is, 15.0 or less.

"The most unexpected finding was that obesity among sub-continent Indians was not associated with excess mortality," said Potter. "This may be because many obese people in sub-continent India have a higher socioeconomic status and so have better access to health care."

"Our findings capture two different aspects of a rapidly evolving pattern; severe underweight was highly prevalent in Asia in the past, and we can still observe its important impact on mortality," explained Boffetta. "Looking into the future, however, prevention of overweight and obesity deserves the highest priority."

The authors conclude that this study provides strong evidence supporting the biologic plausibility that excess weight contributes to a higher risk of death.

"This confirms that most people are at a higher risk for dying early if they are obese and is a clear message not to gain weight as we age," said Potter.

Nearly 50 researchers from seven countries contributed to this study. Data analysis for the project was conducted by the Asia Cohort Consortium Coordinating Center, which is supported, in part, by Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the National Cancer Institute.

Source: Vanderbilt University Medical Center


http://www.medicaldaily.com/news/20110228/5601/new-research-shows-body-weight-affects-risk-of-death-among-asians.htm