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Senior Member
Registered: 07-02-07
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*Sigh* Someone in obesity help posted these articles that cited recent research about obesity being socially contagious. When does it ever stop?? I'd love to know if MJo has come across these before and what her thoughts are.

Study: Obesity is Socially Contagious
Jeanna Bryner



People who notice their friend packing on pounds might want to steer clear if they value their sleek physiques.

A new study finds that when the scale reads "obese" for one individual, the odds that their friends will become obese increase by more than 50 percent.


The study, published in the July 26 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, suggests that obesity is "socially contagious," as it can spread among individuals in close social circles. The likely explanation: A person's idea of what is an appropriate body size is affected by the size of his or her friends.



Conversely, the researchers found that thinness is also contagious.



"Social effects, I think, are much stronger than people before realized," said co-author James Fowler, a social-networks expert at the University of California-San Diego. "There's been an intensive effort to find genes that are responsible for obesity and physical processes that are responsible for obesity, and what our paper suggests is that you really should spend time looking at the social side of life as well."



An outside expert on social networks called the new research impressive, particularly in showing a causal link between obesity and friends. However, he cautioned that the evidence for the effect extending out to friends' friends, and so on, is weaker.



"The suggestion in their paper is that obesity sort of spreads through the network as if it were some kind of epidemic, some kind of contagious disease," said Duncan Watts, who studies social networks at Columbia University. While this is plausible, he noted, the current research doesn't provide direct evidence for this phenomena.



Social networks



Research has shown that peers influence each other's health behaviors. One past study showed that teens associating with friends who smoke and drink were more likely to take up the behaviors. However, no past research has looked at how the impact extends to friends' friends and beyond.



In the new study, Fowler and Nicholas Christakis of Harvard Medical School analyzed health data collected between 1971 and 2003 from more than 12,000 adults who participated in the Framingham Heart Study, an ongoing cardiovascular study. Participants provided contact information for close friends, many of whom were also study participants, resulting in a total of 38,611 social and family ties.



The researchers found that if a participant's friend became obese over the course of the study, the chances that the participant also became obese increased by 57 percent. Among mutual friends (both individuals indicate the other is a "friend"), the chances nearly tripled.



Among siblings, if one becomes obese the likelihood of their sister or brother becoming obese increases by 40 percent. Among spouses there is a 37 percent increased risk.



Gender also affected the degree of "obesity contagion." In same-sex friendships, individuals had a 71 percent increased risk of obesity if a friend became obese. If a guy's brother is obese, he's 44 percent more likely to also become obese. Among sisters, the risk was 67 percent.



Fat factors



Other studies have suggested that obesity might be physically contagious, possibly passing from one person to another by virus. But that idea has not been firmly supported. The new study doesn't address this possibility but instead looked at mindsets and attitudes as the controlling factors.



Fat-fueling factors were taken into consideration. For instance, the researchers made sure the effect wasn't a case of "birds of a feather flocking together." Body measurements were taken throughout the study period, showing when individuals became obese and whether they began the study with obese readings.



"It's not that obese or non-obese people simply find other similar people to hang out with," Christakis said. "Rather, there is a direct, causal relationship."



They also ruled out the idea that an outside factor, and not the friendship, caused the fatness. If an environmental factor were affecting both individuals in a friendship, then it shouldn't matter whether individuals are mutual friends or just one individual labels the other as a friend.

The study, however, found that it does matter which way the friend arrow points: If subjects named an obese person as a friend, they tended to be affected by that person's obesity.

But when the person on the receiving end did not label the first person as a friend, there was no "obesity contagion" effect in the other direction. The distinct variable here is who calls whom a "friend."

"The fact that it only has an effect when I think you're my friend is very strongly suggestive to me," Watts said. "That's about as good as you can do in terms of identifying a causal relationship."

Perhaps friends just spend a lot of time together and so would eat similar foods and engage in the same physical activities. But they found the results held no matter the geographic proximity of friends.

"So friends that are thousands of miles away have just as large an impact on you as friends who are right next door," Fowler told LiveScience.

The scientists suggest the findings can be explained if friends are influencing one another's norms for body weight.

"What appears to be happening is that a person becoming obese most likely causes a change of norms about what counts as an appropriate body size," Christakis said. "People come to think that it is OK to be bigger since those around them are bigger, and this sensibility spreads."

Bulging waistlines

In the past 25 years, obesity among U.S. adults has shot from 15 to 32 percent. The new study reveals friends could be feeding the fat epidemic, along with our large-serving, high-calorie, fast-food lifestyles.

"We show that one person's behavior ripples through the network to have an impact beyond those first-order friendships," Fowler said. "So we're talking about dozens of people that are affected by one person's health outcomes and health behaviors."

He added, "And that needs to be taken into account by policy analysts and also by politicians who are trying to decide what the best measures are for making society healthier."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20070725/sc_livescience/ studyobesityissociallycontagious;_ylt=AvlW9WhJGFNmu4Wd2Z5ffX YE1vAI



Watch out, you may catch obesity



NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Like the common cold, obesity can be spread from person to person, new research suggests.

A person's social network can influence their risk of obesity, according to new study findings reported in The New England Journal of Medicine. The results suggest that if you want to stay thin, you may not want to surround yourself with obese friends and relatives.

"It's not that obese or non-obese people simply find other similar people to hang out with," study co-author Dr. Nicholas A. Christakis, from Harvard Medical School in Boston, said in a statement. Rather, the one directly causes the other, he explained.

"What appears to be happening is that a person becoming obese most likely causes a change of norms about what counts as an appropriate body size. People come to think that it is okay to be bigger since those around them are bigger, and this sensibility spreads," Christakis noted.

The findings stem from a study of 12,067 individuals who were part of densely interconnected social network and were evaluated from 1971 to 2003 as part of the Framingham Heart Study. Body mass index, the ratio of body weight to height, was determined for all subjects and complex statistical tests were used to determine how the weight gain of a friend, sibling, spouse, or neighbor might affect a person's own weight.

The researchers identified clusters of obese people in the social network that were apparent throughout the study period. These clusters extended to three degrees of separation, the authors note.

During a given time period, the likelihood that a person would become obese rose by 57 percent if they had a friend who became obese. If a sibling or a spouse became obese, a person's risk of becoming obese increased 40 and 37 percent, respectively.

The risk of obesity was usually greater if the person's associate was of the same gender, the report indicates.

By contrast, local environmental factors seemed to have little impact on person's risk of becoming obese. For instance, people with obese neighbors who were not in their social network were not at heightened risk for becoming obese themselves.

"Social effects, I think, are much stronger than people before realized," co-author Dr. James H. Fowler, from the University of California, San Diego, said in a statement. "There's been an intensive effort to find genes that are responsible for obesity and physical processes that are responsible for obesity; and what our paper suggests is that you really should spend time looking at the social side of life as well."

SOURCE: The New England Journal of Medicine, July 26, 2007.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070725/hl_nm/watch_obesity_dc_1
Senior Member
Registered: 06-14-06
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Well, duh, it does seem to run in families. Have they actually ruled out the possibility that it's genetic?

And heavy people do tend to have heavy friends. But I'd be hard pressed to say whether my friendships came before my weight. Could be that I select people who look like me because I'm more comfortable with them - when I hang around skinny people, it makes me feel very conspicuous and uncomfortable, whether they mean to make me feel that way or not.

Another thing: The increase in obesity? I keep wondering whether it might have to do with all the stuff we feed our meat animals to fatten them. Seriously, if we feed and inject a cow with stuff that's supposed to make her fat, and then we eat the cow, why should it come as a surprise that we get fat too? They claim these growth hormones don't show up in the meat, but isn't it interesting that about the time we started doing these things to accelerate growth, we as a population started packing on the weight too?
Senior Member
Registered: 07-02-07
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Some of the info is legit and makes sense. I just hate how it states to "steer clear of obese friends" and things like that.

I just wonder how reliable the conclusions are because this study was based on a retrospective analysis of data from an extensive cardiac study inititally done decades ago. It's called the Farmingham study. It was a huge study...but to go back fifty years later and extrapolate data and conclusions from it ...I dunno.
Junior Member
Registered: 07-14-07
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While I understand that this is true to an extent I think it is more "birds of a feather" than contageous. My fear is that this will be used as another reason to discriminate against fat people. After all, if you are thin and fear gaining weight you should drop all your fat friends according to this article. And what about workplaces who already discriminate against hiring fat people because of increased insurance costs? Now they can worry if hiring too many fat people will infect the rest of their workforce. The information is just too little to base anything real on but just enough to start panic.
Senior Member
Registered: 07-02-07
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Justy: My sentiments exactly! Can almost picture it like the sixties....keep the fatties away. Let's have a fatty and a thin section at work, on lunch breaks, in restaurants. Oh, please....keep the fatties out of my visual range, lets it encourage other impressionable souls to "let themselves go" when otherwise they wouldn't have.
Junior Member
Registered: 07-06-07
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marneynoelle,
where is this obesity help group at?
thanks

ps: I enjoy reading your posts!
blacksheepkeeper@yahoo.com
Junior Member
Registered: 07-02-07
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This study is based on junk science and computer extrapolation of bad data. For a thorough explanation, visit http://junkfoodscience.blogspot.com. I can't quote directly from the articles there because I'm at work and they block blogspot blogs! (don't try to type that three times fast.) The flurry of "fat is contagious" articles are nothing more than fat-bashing from those who have an agenda. Then, the media picks up on it and conflates it to a ridiculous extent. It's very sad. The last thing obese people need is people thinking it'll "rub off" on them too.
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