November 17, 2008
Huntington rated unhealthiest city
City's economic challenges more pressing, Felinton says
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HUNTINGTON - As a portly woman plodded ahead of him on the sidewalk, the obese mayor of America's fattest and unhealthiest city explained why health is not a big local issue.

"It doesn't come up," said David Felinton, 5-foot-9 and 233 pounds, as he walked toward City Hall one recent morning. "We've got a lot of economic challenges here in Huntington. That's usually the focus."

Huntington's economy has withered, its poverty rate is worse than the national average, and vagrants haunt a downtown riverfront park. But this city's financial woes are not nearly as bad as its health.

Nearly half the adults in Huntington's five-county metropolitan area are obese - an astounding percentage, far bigger than the national average in a country with a well-known weight problem.

Huntington leads in a half-dozen other illness measures, too, including heart disease and diabetes. It's even tops in the percentage of elderly people who have lost all their teeth (half of them have).

It's a sad situation, and a potential harbinger of what will happen to other U.S. communities, said Ken Thorpe, an Emory University health policy professor who is working with West Virginia officials on health reform legislation.

"They may be at the very top, but obesity and diabetes trends are very similar" in many other communities, particularly in the South, Thorpe said.

The Huntington area's health problems, cited in a U.S. health report, are a terrible distinction for the city, but the locals barely talk about it. Many don't even know how poorly the city ranks.

Culture and history are at least part of the problem, health officials say.

This city on the Ohio River is surrounded by Appalachia's thinly populated hills. It has long been a blue-collar, white-skinned community - overwhelmingly people of English, Irish and German ancestry.

For decades, Huntington thrived with the coal mines to its south, as barges, trucks and trains loaded with the black fuel continually chugged into and past the city. There were plenty of manufacturing jobs in the chemical industry and in glassworks, steel and locomotive parts. Nearly 90,000 people lived in the city in 1950.

The traditional diet was heavy with fried foods, salt, gravy, sauces, and fattier meats - dense with calories burnt off through manual labor. Obesity was not a worry then. Workplace injuries were.

But as the coal industry modernized and the economy changed, manufacturing jobs left. The city's population is now fewer than 50,000, and chronic diseases - many of them connected to obesity - seem much more common.

Shari Wiley is a nurse at St. Mary's Regional Heart Institute in Huntington. She runs a program that identifies heavy schoolchildren and tries to teach them better eating and exercise habits. The effort began because of an alarming trend.

"A lot of the patients we were seeing were getting heart attacks in their 30s. They were requiring open heart surgery in their 30s. And we were concerned because it used to be you wouldn't see heart patients come in until they were in their 50s," Wiley said.

The Huntington area is essentially tied with a few other metro areas for proportion of people who don't exercise (31 percent), have heart disease (22 percent) and diabetes (13 percent). The smoking rate is pretty high, too, although not the worst.

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Posted By: mrmero (2:52am 11-22-2008)
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Appollo: One of the duties I volunteered for where I work is to run some wellness programs to try to convince people to be a little healthier, stop smoking, eat some vegetables, lose a few pounds. I'm not a fanatic about it and I'm not as angry and condescending as I sound on this board. However, when I travel to the midwest, I am shocked by the number of fat people. I think its becoming a crisis. I wonder how people can live that way. I think its a shame that my dead fat friend did it to himself. He ate himself to death. I hate to see people be so stupid.

Posted By: Apollo (2:35pm 11-21-2008)
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mrmero,

Would your sense of loss be any different if your friend had been hit by a train and lost his legs?

And since you seem to be so concerned, let me ask, in all sincerity; are you doing anything to help "fat" people make better choices? It almost sounds as if this is something you might have a passion for and redirect the perceived "ill-will" to a positive outcome.

Posted By: mrmero (1:36pm 11-21-2008)
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I had another fat friend who had diabetes. He went camping one week-end and had a heart attack. Because he was out camping, he couldn't get medical help for about 12 hours. Because of the delay he had both legs amputated above the knees due to complications from the heart attack. He lived in a wheel chair for a few short years and then died. All of this happened because he was fat and didn't get enough exercise. But, we wouldn't want to be a bigot and point out his poor choices while he still had time to address them. Might have hurt his feelings.

Posted By: mrmero (1:18pm 11-21-2008)
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I have a fat friend in WV and when we once discussed why she didn't lose the couple hundred pounds that she needed to lose she said "Well, the doctor didn't give me anything for it!!" Her comment spoke volumes to me about the ability of people to rationalize away their poor choices. I concluded that she was too stupid and lazy to face facts about her condition, take resonsibility and actually make some changes in her life. I find it frustrating and I use harsh language. Really sorry. I'm not giving up my WV citizenship and thanks Appollo for offering it up. I will continue to speak frankly to my fat friends and try to get them to see the folly of their ways. Stop eating potato chips and start eating fruit and vegetables and get off your fat butt and get some exercise. You don't have to look like a model but you do have to take some responsibilty and employ a little self control, concepts that have been lost in our society these days. I'm such a bigot, I know.

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