Severely 
                                        Obese Are Fastest Growing Segment of Overweight 
                                        Americans
                                      (HealthDay 
                                        News) -- The proportion of severely obese 
                                        Americans -- those with a body mass index 
                                        of 40 or more -- increased by 50 percent 
                                        from 2000 to 2005, twice as fast as the 
                                        increase in moderate obesity, a new study 
                                        finds.
                                      During 
                                        that same period, the proportion of overweight 
                                        people (BMI of 30 or more) increased by 
                                        24 percent, and the proportion of those 
                                        with a BMI of 50 or more increased by 
                                        75 percent. In the past 20 years, the 
                                        largest percentage increases have occurred 
                                        in the heaviest weight groups, the RAND 
                                        Corporation study said.
                                      Body 
                                        mass index, or BMI, is a ratio of weight 
                                        to height. A typical severely obese man 
                                        weighs 300 pounds at a height of 5 feet 
                                        10 inches, while a typical severely obese 
                                        woman weighs 250 pounds at a height of 
                                        5 feet 4 inches.
                                      "The 
                                        proportion of people at the high end of 
                                        the weight scale continues to increase 
                                        at a brisk rate despite increased public 
                                        attention on the risks of obesity and 
                                        the increased use of drastic weight loss 
                                        strategies, such as bariatric surgery," 
                                        report author Roland Sturm, a RAND economist, 
                                        said in a prepared statement.
                                      The 
                                        study concluded that three percent of 
                                        Americans are severely obese. Health costs 
                                        for severely obese people are expected 
                                        to be double that of normal weight people, 
                                        while health costs for moderately obese 
                                        people are expected to be 25 percent more.
                                      From 
                                        1998 to 2003, the number of bariatric 
                                        surgeries in the United States increased 
                                        from 13,000 to 100,000. An estimated 200,000 
                                        bariatric procedures were done in the 
                                        United States in 2006, the study said.
                                      "The 
                                        explosion in the use of bariatric surgery 
                                        has made no noticeable dent in the trend 
                                        of morbid obesity," Sturm said.
                                      He 
                                        said the study findings suggest that severe 
                                        obesity is not a rare condition among 
                                        certain genetically vulnerable people 
                                        but, rather, is an integral part of the 
                                        U.S. population's weight distribution. 
                                        As the entire population becomes heavier, 
                                        there are more and more severely obese 
                                        people.
                                      RAND 
                                        is a nonprofit research organization. 
                                        The study is expected to be published 
                                        later this year in the journal Public 
                                        Health.