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U.S. obesity correlates to vehicle usage

Increased use of vehicles has contributed to the increase in obesity in the U.S., a study has found. UPI/Kevin Dietsch
Increased use of vehicles has contributed to the increase in obesity in the U.S., a study has found. UPI/Kevin Dietsch | License Photo

CHAMPAIGN, Ill., May 16 (UPI) -- The surge in U.S. vehicle usage beginning in the 1950s and continuing today may explain America's surging levels of obesity, a researcher suggests.

Sheldon H. Jacobson of the University of Illinois in Champaign and students Douglas M. King and Rong Yuan analyzed annual vehicle miles traveled per licensed driver as a surrogate measure for a person's total sedentary time.

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"If you look over the last 60-plus years, the automobile has become our primary mode of transportation -- so much so, in fact, we have literally designed our way of life around it. It is that energy imbalance that ultimately may lead to obesity," Jacobson says in a statement.

After analyzing national data from 1985 and 2007, Jacobson discovered vehicle use correlated "in the 99-percent range" with national annual obesity rates. Jacobson used annual vehicle miles traveled as a proxy for a person's sedentary time because inactivity is most obvious when sitting in a car.

"If we drive more, we become heavier as a nation, and the cumulative lack of activity may eventually lead to, at the aggregate level, obesity," Jacobson says in a statement.

"When you are sitting in a car, you are doing nothing, so your body is burning the least amount of energy possible and if you are eating food in your car, it becomes even worse."

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The findings are published in the journal Transport Policy.

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