Obese older adults tend to have
lower quality of life than those who are normal weight or
overweight
Obese elderly people have a lower quality of life than their
normal weight and overweight counterparts. The reduction in
quality of life due to obesity is similar to that suffered
by people with arthritis, stroke, ulcers, asthma, and anxiety,
according to a study supported in part by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (HS09170). Nearly 3 million quality years
are lost in this country each year from obesity and associated
conditions, according to Robert M. Kaplan, Ph.D., of the University
of California, San Diego, and his colleagues.
The researchers evaluated the relationship between body mass
index (BMI; weight in kg/height in m2) and health-related
quality of life (HRQOL) scores among 1,326 adults with a mean
age of 72 years to estimate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs)
lost to overweight, obesity, and associated conditions. They
divided individuals into four groups based on BMI: less than
20 (underweight); 20 to 24.9 (normal); 25 to 29.9 (overweight,
for example, a 5'5" woman who weighs 150 pounds or more
or a 5'11" man who weighs 180 pounds or more); and greater
than 30 (obese, for example, a 5'5" woman who weighs
180 pounds or more or a 5'5" man who weighs 215 pounds
or more). They then correlated BMI with scores on the Quality
of Well-Being (QWB) Scale, which has scores ranging from 0
for death to 1.0 for asymptomatic optimal functioning.
After controlling for age, sex, smoking history, and exercise,
the normal BMI group had the highest QWB score (0.709), followed
by the underweight (0.698), overweight (0.695), and obese
(0.663) groups. The QWB score for the obese group was 0.046
lower than the normal weight group, suggesting a substantially
lower quality of life. The quality of life of overweight people
did not differ significantly from that of people in the normal
BMI group.
See "Body mass index and quality of well-being in a
community of older adults," by Erik J. Groessl, Ph.D.,
Dr. Kaplan, Elizabeth Barrett-Connor, M.D., and Theodore G.
Ganiats, M.D., in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine
26(2), pp. 126-129, 2004.
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