Picture of Health Care Policy Center

Health Care Policy Center

Share

Picture of Health Care Policy Center

Health Care Policy Center

Things You May Not Know About Government and Obesity

For example, "American taxpayers pay almost as much for government feeding programs as overweight and obesity generate in excess medical costs." Continue reading

Linda Gorman, director of the Indendence Institute’s Health Care Policy Center, writes:

Mayor Bloomberg wants to ban large sodas. The Institute of Medicine wants to tax unhealthy folks. As John Goodman showed in a previous post, it’s hard to justify any of this. Here are some additional considerations.

Population obesity seems to have plateaued. …

In 1997, the government made 35.4 million adults overweight overnight. …

Americans gained weight while following national dietary guidelines. …

National definitions of overweight are based on the BMI distribution of people aged 20-29 despite evidence suggesting that as people age, the lowest mortality occurs at progressively increasing weights. …

Absent identifiable pathogens, any regime to classify foods as good or bad based on current evidence will be arbitrary, encouraging crony capitalism and unproductive rent seeking. …

American taxpayers pay almost as much for government feeding programs as overweight and obesity generate in excess medical costs. …

Read the whole post for details on each of the above points: Things You May Not Know About Government and Obesity | John Goodman’s Health Policy Blog | NCPA.org.