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thedrifter
01-16-07, 09:07 AM
A weighty concern

More fat youths making it tougher to get recruits
By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : January 22, 2007

The percentage of overweight youths who intend to enter military service has climbed steadily over the past decade, according to a report in January by Army Medical Surveillance Activity.

Based on a 1996-2005 survey of 18-year-olds at Military Entrance Processing Stations, height and weight measurements showed the percentage of overweight men had increased from 29 to 34 percent; for women, the increase was from 19 to 25 percent.

During the same period, national obesity rates for 18- to 29-year-olds increased from 10 percent to 18 percent, according to the report.

The increased number of overweight teens “is a military, as well as general public health, concern,” the report states.

The percentage of overweight potential recruits increased each year of the survey.

The military weight standard is important to the services’ accessions commands because almost 80 percent of recruits who don’t meet the height-weight standards fall out before they finish their first term, according to a study by the Institute of Medicine.

More potential recruits with weight issues makes an already challenging recruiting environment tougher. The Army is in the midst of a campaign to add tens of thousands of soldiers to its ranks but has been hindered by an unpopular war and parents and other authority figures who oppose military service.

The Army Medical Surveillance Activity study included all 18-year-olds who were measured for height and weight at Military Entrance Processing Stations for all branches of the military. Of a total of 554,587 men and women, 80 percent were men.

Their heights and weights were used to calculate body mass index. A BMI of 25 or higher is considered overweight, and a BMI of 30 or higher is considered obese.

Obese potential recruits doubled — from 3 percent to 6 percent — the report states.

One-third of overweight recruits came from Texas, California, Florida or Ohio, and about 60 percent of overweight recruits came from the Midwest or Northeast, according to the survey.

The highest increase was on Guam, where the percentage of overweight 18-year-olds rose from 22 percent in 1996 to 30 percent in 2005.

“BMIs were slightly higher among 18-year-old males and females who applied for military service compared to their counterparts in the general population of the United States,” the report states.

The National Research Council found that if the military had an enlistment standard of a 25 BMI, it could disqualify as many as 40 percent of young women — of all ages, rather than the 18-year-olds in this study — and 25 percent of young men.

The services don’t use BMI measurements but instead rely primarily on height-weight charts. If a service member doesn’t meet height-weight requirements, tape tests are used to calculate body fat and determine whether the individual exceeds weight standards.

Ellie

The1stSgt
01-16-07, 09:23 AM
Calories in, calories out.

Watching TV, surfing the web, and playing video games don't burn to many calories.

davecerami275
01-16-07, 09:39 AM
back in the days playing football meant getting all of your friends and enemies together, going to a empty field, choosing teams, beating the hell out of each, other on a improvised football field. running, tackling, passing catching.(same thing applied during the summer, except it was baseball).


today. playing football/baseball means sitting your fat a$$ in front of a tv and playing a fu/*ing football video game while you stuff your face with pizza and soda.