Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./DUMP-TEXT/1-47.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : UTF-8
Forme recherchée : obésité | obesity
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
- Ligne n°123 : Poverty and Obesity in the U.S.
- Ligne n°140 : High-income countries have greater rates of obesity than middle- and
Ligne n°141 : low-income countries (1). Countries that develop wealth also develop ...
Ligne n°141 : ... low-income countries (1). Countries that develop wealth also develop- Ligne n°142 : obesity; for instance, with economic growth in China and India, obesity
- Ligne n°142 : obesity; for instance, with economic growth in China and India, obesity
Ligne n°143 : rates have increased by several-fold (1). The international trend is ...
Ligne n°143 : ... rates have increased by several-fold (1). The international trend is- Ligne n°144 : that greater obesity tracks with greater wealth (2,3).
Ligne n°146 : ... The U.S. is one of the wealthiest countries in the world and- Ligne n°147 : accordingly has high obesity rates; one-third of the population has
Ligne n°148 : obesity plus another third is overweight. The situation is predicted to ...
Ligne n°147 : ... accordingly has high obesity rates; one-third of the population has- Ligne n°148 : obesity plus another third is overweight. The situation is predicted to
Ligne n°149 : worsen; rising childhood obesity rates forewarn of worsening statistics ...
Ligne n°148 : ... obesity plus another third is overweight. The situation is predicted to- Ligne n°149 : worsen; rising childhood obesity rates forewarn of worsening statistics
Ligne n°150 : (4). While it is agreed that both individual factors such as genetic ...
Ligne n°152 : ... evidence is ill-defined with respect to the nature of the environmental- Ligne n°153 : influences that impact obesity (5).
- Ligne n°160 : Are poverty and obesity associated? Poverty rates and obesity were
- Ligne n°160 : Are poverty and obesity associated? Poverty rates and obesity were
Ligne n°161 : reviewed across 3,139 counties in the U.S. (2,6). In contrast to ...
Ligne n°162 : ... international trends, people in America who live in the most- Ligne n°163 : poverty-dense counties are those most prone to obesity (Fig. 1A).
Ligne n°164 : Counties with poverty rates of >35% have obesity rates 145% greater ...
Ligne n°163 : ... poverty-dense counties are those most prone to obesity (Fig. 1A).- Ligne n°164 : Counties with poverty rates of >35% have obesity rates 145% greater
Ligne n°165 : than wealthy counties. ...
Ligne n°177 : ... the poorest quintile, includes 629 counties with a mean poverty rate of- Ligne n°178 : 25% (median household income, $32,679). A: County age-adjusted obesity
Ligne n°179 : rates by poverty quintile. B: County obesity rates vs. county ...
Ligne n°178 : ... 25% (median household income, $32,679). A: County age-adjusted obesity- Ligne n°179 : rates by poverty quintile. B: County obesity rates vs. county
Ligne n°180 : leisure-time sedentary rates (sedentary adults are those who report no ...- Ligne n°185 : How is poverty linked to obesity? It has been suggested that
Ligne n°186 : individuals who live in impoverished regions have poor access to fresh ...
Ligne n°197 : ... availability of healthy food is, however, unlikely to be the only- Ligne n°198 : reason as to why obesity tracks with poverty.
Ligne n°200 : ... There is evidence of the association between sedentariness, poor- Ligne n°201 : health, obesity, diabetes, other metabolic diseases, and premature
Ligne n°202 : death (8). Sedentary individuals move 2 h per day less than active ...
Ligne n°203 : ... individuals and expend less energy, and they are thereby prone to- Ligne n°204 : obesity, chronic metabolic disease, and cardiovascular death (9). More
Ligne n°205 : than half of county-to-county variance in obesity can be accounted for ...
Ligne n°204 : ... obesity, chronic metabolic disease, and cardiovascular death (9). More- Ligne n°205 : than half of county-to-county variance in obesity can be accounted for
Ligne n°206 : by variance in sedentariness (Fig. 1B). Overall, the poorest counties ...
Ligne n°206 : ... by variance in sedentariness (Fig. 1B). Overall, the poorest counties- Ligne n°207 : have the greatest sedentariness (Fig. 1C) and obesity.
Ligne n°215 : ... There are multiple individual and environmental reasons to explain why- Ligne n°216 : poverty-dense counties may be more sedentary and bear greater obesity
Ligne n°217 : burdens. What is unknown is whether reversing poverty would reverse ...
Ligne n°217 : ... burdens. What is unknown is whether reversing poverty would reverse- Ligne n°218 : sedentariness and obesity. It is an urgent matter to address—both rates
Ligne n°219 : of childhood obesity and poverty are concomitantly on the rise (1,2). ...
Ligne n°218 : ... sedentariness and obesity. It is an urgent matter to address—both rates- Ligne n°219 : of childhood obesity and poverty are concomitantly on the rise (1,2).
- Ligne n°221 : The link between obesity, inactivity, and poverty may be too costly to
Ligne n°222 : ignore because obesity-associated chronic disease already accounts for ...
Ligne n°221 : ... The link between obesity, inactivity, and poverty may be too costly to- Ligne n°222 : ignore because obesity-associated chronic disease already accounts for
Ligne n°223 : 70% of U.S. health costs. For instance, counties with greatest rates of ...
Ligne n°226 : ... were uninsured (no private or government health insurance). This cohort- Ligne n°227 : represents, 15,483,000 people, ∼5 million with obesity and ∼1 million
Ligne n°228 : with diabetes (10). With expanded health care provision in the U.S., ...
Ligne n°237 : ... potential lost tax revenues associated with disability (12). Add these- Ligne n°238 : figures to the health care costs of other chronic obesity-associated
Ligne n°239 : diagnoses such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, sleep disorders, ...
Ligne n°265 : ... 1. James WP- Ligne n°266 : . The epidemiology of obesity: the size of the problem. J Intern
Ligne n°267 : Med 2008;263:336–352 ...
Ligne n°272 : ... 3. Deurenberg-Yap M- Ligne n°273 : . Review on epidemic of obesity. Ann Acad Med Singapore
Ligne n°274 : 2009;38:57–59 ...
Ligne n°278 : ... 2. Khurana L- Ligne n°279 : . Obesity and the metabolic syndrome in developing countries. J
Ligne n°280 : Clin Endocrinol Metab 2008;93(Suppl 1):S9–S30 ...
Ligne n°286 : ... 2. Peters JC- Ligne n°287 : . Environmental contributions to the obesity epidemic. Science
Ligne n°288 : 1998;280:1371–1374 ...
Ligne n°308 : ... 3. Zderic TW- Ligne n°309 : . Role of low energy expenditure and sitting in obesity, metabolic
Ligne n°310 : syndrome, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Diabetes ...
Ligne n°320 : ... 2. Koepp GA- Ligne n°321 : . Federal health-care reform: opportunities for obesity prevention.
Ligne n°322 : Obesity (Silver Spring) 2011;19:897–899 ...
Ligne n°321 : ... . Federal health-care reform: opportunities for obesity prevention.- Ligne n°322 : Obesity (Silver Spring) 2011;19:897–899
Ligne n°323 : OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed ...
Ligne n°373 : ... commas.- Ligne n°374 : You are going to email the following Poverty and Obesity in the U.S.
Ligne n°375 : Message Subject (Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Diabetes ...
Ligne n°391 : ... Citation Tools- Ligne n°392 : Poverty and Obesity in the U.S.
Ligne n°393 : James A. Levine ...- Ligne n°414 : Poverty and Obesity in the U.S.
Ligne n°415 : James A. Levine ...