What Is Obesity?
Obesity results from the excessive accumulation of fat
that exceeds the body's skeletal and physical standards. According
to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), an increase in 20
percent or more above your ideal body weight is the point at which
excess weight becomes a health risk. Today 97 million Americans,
more than one-third of the adult population, are overweight or
obese. An estimated 5 to 10 million of those are considered morbidly obese.
What Is Morbid Obesity?
Obesity becomes "morbid" when it reaches the point of
significantly increasing the risk of one or more obesity-related
health conditions or serious diseases (also known as co-morbidities)
that result either in significant physical disability or even death.
As you read about morbid obesity you may also see the term
"clinically severe obesity" used. Both are descriptions of the same
condition and can be used interchangeably. Morbid obesity is
typically defined as being 100 lbs. or more over ideal body weight
or having a Body Mass Index of 40 or higher. According to the
National Institutes of Health Consensus Report, morbid obesity is a
serious disease and must be treated as such. It is a chronic
disease, meaning that its symptoms build slowly over an extended
period of time.
