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  2. Body fat percentage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_fat_percentage

    In males, mean percentage body fat ranged from 23% at age 16–19 years to 31% at age 60–79 years. In females, mean percentage body fat ranged from 32% at age 8–11 years to 42% at age 60–79 years. But it is important to recognise that women need at least 9% more body fat than men to live a normal healthy life. [2]

  3. Epidemiology of obesity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_obesity

    The number of Canadians who are obese has risen dramatically in recent years. In 2004, direct measurements of height and weight found 23.1% of Canadians older than 18 had a BMI greater than 30. When broken down into degrees of obesity, 15.2% were class I (BMI 30–34.9), 5.1% were class II (BMI 35–39.9), and 2.7%, class III (BMI ≥ 40).

  4. Obesity in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obesity_in_the_United_States

    Over 70 million adults in U.S. are obese (35 million men and 35 million women). 99 million are overweight (45 million women and 54 million men). [72] NHANES 2016 statistics showed that about 39.6% of American adults were obese. Men had an age-adjusted rate of 37.9% and Women had an age-adjusted rate of 41.1%. [70]

  5. Abdominal obesity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdominal_obesity

    Absolute waist circumference (>102 cm (40 in) in men and >88 cm (35 in) in women) [78] Waist–hip ratio (the circumference of the waist divided by that of the hips of >0.9 for men and >0.85 for women) [1] Waist-stature ratio (waist circumference divided by their height, >0.5 for adults under 40 and >0.6 for adults over 50)

  6. Obesity and the environment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obesity_and_the_environment

    Female students who attended school where most of the females were obese, however, had a relatively similar chance of attending college as non-obese women. [32] Weight bias, fat stigma, and discrimination are factors that many academics say can contribute to hopelessness and depression, encouraging the same unhealthy habits that initially ...

  7. Media depictions of body shape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Depictions_of_Body_Shape

    The media promote a weight-conscious standard for women more often than for men. [1] Deviance from these norms result in social consequences. [2] The media perpetuate this ideal in various ways, particularly glorifying and focusing on thin actors and actresses, models, and other public figures while avoiding the use or image of overweight ...

  8. Childhood obesity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childhood_obesity

    Of those adolescents who lost weight after bariatric surgery, 60% maintained at least a 20% weight loss at five-year follow-up and 8% had regained most of the pre-surgical weight. [6] Lack of pre-surgical weight loss is associated with an increased risk of weight gain after bariatric surgery. [ 6 ]

  9. Body water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_water

    The figure for water fraction by weight in this sample was found to be 58 ±8% water for males and 48 ±6% for females. [4] The body water constitutes as much as 75% of the body weight of a newborn infant, whereas some obese people are as little as 45% water by weight. [5] This is due to how fat tissue does not retain water as well as lean tissue.