February 25, 2012
What happened? How, why, when did W.Va. pack on the pounds?
Page 2 of 2
Kate Long
Beginning in the 1980s, things changed. West Virginia and the rest of the country were overtaken by a perfect storm of less physical jobs, processed food, soda pop, fast food, reduced physical education and hours of video games and texting. The percentage of West Virginians who are obese almost tripled between 1960 (13.4 percent) and 2008 (34.3 percent). Click more media to see a few of the things that led us here and to view more photos from W.Va.'s history.
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  • Most West Virginians now work lower-activity jobs.
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  • In many families, both parents work.
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  • In 2009, more than 60 percent of West Virginia high school students got no physical education. Many schools have cancelled recess.
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  • In 1969, 48 percent of American children 5 to 14 walked or biked to school.  By 2009, it was 13 percent.
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  • Computers, TV and other screen activities keep kids inactive.
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    As Americans grew heavier, West Virginians grew heavier faster. Sometime between 1980 and 1992, West Virginia crossed above the national average.

    Why? Appalachian researchers and historians say West Virginia faces particular challenges that accelerate the national trend:

     

  • Chronic poverty. In counties where more than 35 percent of people are obese, the poverty rate ranges from 20 to 40 percent, compared with 18 percent statewide.
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  • Education level. In the heaviest counties, six to 12 percent of people attended college, compared with 17 percent statewide.
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  • Environmental risks in water and air. West Virginia University researchers have documented an association between lung cancer, heart disease, and birth defects and proximity to coal mining operations.
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  • Isolation. The heaviest counties tend not to be near Interstate highways.
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    As West Virginia's weight rose, more West Virginians developed chronic diseases associated with obesity, until the state led the nation in diabetes, heart attack, hypertension and kidney failure.

    In 2011, the federal Centers for Disease Control released a map of counties with the highest diabetes rates. A deadly swath cuts down through the Appalachians to the Gulf Coast, almost exactly overlapping the "obesity belt." 

    Almost every West Virginia county is firmly inside both belts.

    Back to the 1900s

    In the early 1900s, historian Lewis said, West Virginians died mostly of contagious diseases such as tuberculosis, pneumonia and influenza. Today's killers -- diabetes, heart disease and hypertension -- were low on the radar screen. Contagious diseases killed people before chronic diseases could.

    As West Virginia has gotten a grip on contagious diseases, chronic disease rates have risen.

    "The way we think about eating, culturally, makes a difference too," Lewis said. Through the first half of the 1900s, West Virginians associated fat and eating with prosperity and health, he said. "When people thought of a fat person, they thought of a rich person." During the Depression, "eating was even more strongly associated with good health.

    "Food also has powerful social meaning in our culture," he said. "West Virginia's rural history is filled with church socials and community dinners. People show love and hospitality with food. It's often a gift of sorts, and it's up to you to show your appreciation by eating a lot of it.

    "That worked OK as long as people stayed physically active," he said.

    Through the '50s, into the '70s, he said, "we still had an active culture." Children still played outside all day. Most rural people raised gardens.

    But the culture itself has changed. In the 1980s, fewer West Virginians raised gardens and more people had desk jobs, "but people still kept that traditional association between eating heartily and health."

    By 2008, the average West Virginian was 20 pounds heavier than he or she was in 1998. The diabetes statistics began to climb. "Something went out of balance," Lewis said.

    "The way we eat is in some ways a product of our history and culture, mixed with modern advertising," Dr. Walker said. "That does not suit us well as we move into modern life where we drive a four-wheeler instead of walk up the hill and use a chain saw instead of a crosscut saw.

    "We've got to find ways to talk about that, as a state."

    Reach Kate Long at (304) 348-1798 or katel...@wvgazette.com.

    "The Shape We're In" was written with the help of the Dennis A. Hunt Fund for Health Journalism, administered by the California Endowment Health Journalism Fellowships, at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

    Send us your point of view

    Do you remember a time when West Virginians were active and less heavy? What do you remember? Tell us the view from your piece of the puzzle. The Sunday Gazette-Mail welcomes thoughtful responses of 300 words or fewer. Include your name, address and phone number. Send e-mails to gaze...@wvgazette.com, or letters to

    The Shape We're In

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    1001 Virginia St. E.

    Charleston, W.Va. 25301

     

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