Thursday, August 02, 2007

Find Yourself Packing It On? Blame Friends

Courtesy of NY Times.

Obesity can spread from person to person, much like a virus, researchers are reporting today. When one person gains weight, close friends tend to gain weight, too. Their study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, involved a detailed analysis of a large social network of 12,067 people who had been closely followed for 32 years, from 1971 to 2003. The investigators knew who was friends with whom as well as who was a spouse or sibling or neighbor, and they knew how much each person weighed at various times over three decades. That let them reconstruct what happened over the years as individuals became obese. Did their friends also become obese? Did family members? Or neighbors? The answer, the researchers report, was that people were most likely to become obese when a friend became obese. That increased a person’s chances of becoming obese by 57 percent. It did not even matter if the friend was hundreds of miles away, the influence remained. And the greatest influence of all was between close mutual friends. There, if one became obese, the other had a 171 percent increased chance of becoming obese, too.

Bonnie - as if overweight/obese children are not ostracized enough, now their thin friends can tell them, "we can't be your friend because we are afraid of getting fat." This Framingham research study made huge headlines. If true, why can't the reverse be true? Why can't fat people become thin when all their friends are thin? If it works, we may be onto something.

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