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Men's
Fitness Names The
'10 Fattest Cities In America' 2002
The national men's fitness lifestyle
magazine's fourth annual exclusive survey reveals Houston - for
the second year in a row - to be the chunkiest city in the
country. Flabby runners-up include Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia
and Dallas. The "fittest five" are Colorado Springs,
Denver, San Diego, Seattle and San Francisco. |
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| (Newstream) --
Call it America under stress. In seeking solace from the events of 2001,
many people have turned their backs on exercise to fill their faces.
However, according to Men's Fitness, Americans can't attribute all
the blame to current events for their expanding waistlines. "The
obesity numbers have jumped 61 percent over the past decade," says
Editor-in-Chief Jerry Kindela. "It doesn't help that 27 percent of us
don't engage in any physical activity at all, and another 28.2 percent
aren't regularly active."
Since 1999, Men's Fitness has spearheaded
an effort to get people off their couches and into the gym by providing a
comprehensive analysis of the fattest and fittest cities in the country.
THE TOP 10 FATTEST CITIES
This year's findings showed Texas to be the
largest state of all - in more ways than one - with four cities making the
Top 10 "fattest cities" list. They are, in descending order:
1. Houston, TX
2. Chicago, IL
3. Detroit, MI
4. Philadelphia, PA
5. Dallas, TX
6. Columbus, OH
7. San Antonio, TX
8. Fort Worth, TX
9. St. Louis, MO
10. Indianapolis, IN
THE TOP 10 FITTEST CITIES
California proved to be the slimmest state with
three cities making the Top 10 "fittest cities" list. They are,
in descending order:
1. Colorado Springs, CO
2. Denver, CO
3. San Diego, CA
4. Seattle, WA
5. San Francisco, CA
6. Virginia Beach, VA
7. Honolulu, HI
8. Sacramento, CA
9. Albuquerque, NM
10. Boston, MA
ADDITIONAL FINDINGS
 | The fattest cities have common patterns.
Citizens tend to have poor exercise and nutrition habits, watch a lot
of television and experience more bad weather.
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 | It's not all about warm weather.
Residents of the fittest cities tend to make fitness a priority, along
with civic leaders who support them.
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 | Fitness awareness must start in the
schoolroom, not the workplace. Stopping the current epidemic of
obesity starts with children, who now spend more time in front of the
television than they do at school.
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 | Communities can change. Philadelphia,
1999's "fattest city," used its dubious distinction as a
catalyst to create an innovative, cost-effective fitness initiative
involving community members, government and business, earning the
First Annual Men's Fitness Fit City Achievement Award in the process.
In 2000, Philadelphia dropped to #3, and this year the city ranks #4.
Additionally, Columbus, Ohio, which has fallen into the top ten
"fattest" city rankings for the last few years, has taken on
the Men's Fitness Challenge by launching its own fitness plan called
"Commit to Be Fit." 10,000 residents of central Ohio have
already enrolled in the plan.
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 | Fat costs a ton. An estimated 300,000
Americans die of obesity-related causes each year, and the cost of
obesity and inactivity account for nearly 10 percent of all health
care expenses. Direct medical costs of obesity alone top $100 billion
annually, and the price tag keeps skyrocketing. |
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