The general rate of obesity among adults in the United States has stagnated, but the rate of severe obesity has increased, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
A report compiled by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics found that between August 2021 and August 2023, the rate of obesity among the nation’s adults was approximately 40.3%.
In 2020, the rate of obesity among adults was 41.9%.
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The small decline in the obesity rate is too small to be considered a reversal of the nationwide epidemic, but it does mark a distinct break from past years.
Since 2011, CDC reports have showed a consistently growing portion of U.S. adults struggling with obesity.
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Additionally, the rate of severe obesity continues to increase despite general obesity rates slowing down.
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“The prevalence of severe obesity in men (6.7%) was lower than in women (12.1%) overall and for each age group,” the CDC found. “Among men, the prevalence was highest in those ages 40โ59. Among women, the prevalence was higher in those ages 20โ39 and 40โ59 than in those age 60 and older.”
One of the long-term goals of the CDC’s national “Healthy People 2030” plan is “helping people eat healthy and get enough physical activity to reach and maintain a healthy weight.”
“Healthy People 2030” aims at reducing the rate of obesity to below 38.6% by 2030 but has noted the problem is only “getting worse.”