I think this is a huge part of it. |
Except go to any restaurant in middle America and look at what people are eating and the portions sizes. It’s no wonder they are mostly overweight. People simply eat too much and too often here and don’t exercise enough because they get around via car. |
I tend to agree with this - or at least the premise of it. I just read an Atlantic article from 2015 the other day that has found that over time we'd have to eat less and exercise more to maintain the same weight as earlier generations. Something external has to account for some of it. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/09/why-it-was-easier-to-be-skinny-in-the-1980s/407974/ I think there are other differences in the populations as a whole - more walking, less fast food available, genetics, but I firmly believe that within a generation we will have an environmental explanation as well. |
Im in the UK so semi European and travel a lot to actual Europe. What shocks me about Americans is this obsession with drinking water, always having a water bottle, some idea that being hydrated is the be all and end all.
My theory is that Europeans obsess less about health and food, and their portions are smaller. And yes, no body positivity really and a drive to accept everyone at all sizes. |
+1 It’s our food. |
+1 |
What’s wrong with drinking WATER??? |
Kinda dispute some of your statistics (esp since 'Europe' is huge and has lots of variation).
But the answer seems to be 'all of the above' I mean the US is pretty much trending the wrong way in every statistic; we die more in car crashes, drug overdoses, lack of medical care, etc. We eat worse and stress more. We work more and relax less. It all adds up. |
Really? "People in Europe." WOW! |
Really? All off them? Croats do not have private medical clinics? Their state clinics suck, and they can't get anything done without a connection or a payment? I mean, sure, you can call it universal health care. |
Ha! I’m American and I do agree with you about water bottles. I get so dehydrated when traveling overseas. There’s also no bathrooms anywhere, which is why I think Europeans don’t drink much. |
This. |
However, we tend to live 10 years longer than Americans, and I mean live, not confined in a bed with a feeding tube down our throats and in diapers, being used a Medicare/Medicaid cash machine. I'm European and it's a combination of being more physically active, better food quality, eating in season, no added sugars (this is huge) and smaller portions. Go pick up a loaf of bread in a normal supermarket in Europe and compare it with the ingredients from a similar product at Publix. American bread is 1/2 junk and fillers. We also have decent health insurance, including mental, so we don't need to OD on food as a proxy for meds. My H is a cardiologist and he's seeing heart disease in younger and younger people because of the metabolic disease syndrome. Europe has very little type 2 diabetes in children. Here, Americans are killing their young with the food. |
Americans eat too much. That is it. It isn’t round up, plastics, are any other excuse. |
Meds. In addition to a lot of other factors that have already been mentioned, Americans are also frequently massively overmedicated. Many of those medications result in weight gain. |