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          New Delhi, Jan 27   Women in India are facing a   severe problem of weight extremes with the obese getting fatter and the   undernourished thinner, according to a new study that says this poses a   "major challenge" to the government which should frame policies to   address these health issues. |  The study, "Change in the Body Mass Index Distribution for Women:   Analysis of Surveys from 37 Low- and Middle-Income Countries", by the   University of Toronto and the Harvard School of Public Health found that   women of average weight are disappearing in India and the country sees   more underweight women than obese ones.
 "The study is novel   because for the first time we are showing that increase in Body Mass   Index (BMI) is not happening equally across the board," S. V.   Subramanian, professor of Population Health and Geography at the Harvard   School of Public Health, told IANS.
 
 "Obese and overweight   people are gaining weight rapidly in low-and middle-income countries,   including India, while those who are severely undernourished are not   experiencing similar weight gains," said Subramanian, the senior author   of the study.
 
 "Increases in average BMI are largely driven by   populations that are already overweight or obese, with little to no   change among underweight individuals," he said.
 
 The study shows a   persistent problem of underweight in India, with about 25 percent of   the population being underweight in 2005, and at the same time the   percentage of women who are obese has doubled.
 
 "To put this in   perspective, the number of underweight women exceeds the number of   overweight and obese combined in India. This pattern of persisting   problems of under-nutrition along with a simultaneous rise in obesity is   being seen in most of the low income countries studied," Fahad Razak,   the study's lead author and a fellow at Toronto's St. Michael's   Hospital, told IANS.
 Razak says underweight people die at much higher   rates, perhaps because of diseases related to being malnourished, while   overweight and obese people also have higher rates of death and   disease, mostly from causes such as diabetes, heart disease and cancer.
 
 "We   believe that as India increases its focus on the health needs of   overweight and obese people it must continue to address the needs of the   large number of severely undernourished people in society," says Razak.
 
 The   study used information collected in Demographic and Health Surveys   (DHS) of Indian women with a sample size of 72,469 in 1998 and 91,243 in   2005.
 
 "One might think that as a country grows economically, the   majority of the underweight population would move into the average BMI   range, but our study shows the opposite and the people of average weight   are disappearing in India," says Razak.
 
 "This growing trend of body weight extremes is going to pose a major challenge for health care and policy leaders," says Razak.
 
 "They   will need to balance their priorities between addressing health issues   afflicting the underweight who happen to be poor, and health issues   afflicting the obese and overweight - the upper middle-class and rich."
 
 BMI   is an indicator of body fat calculated by dividing a person's weight in   kilograms by their height in metres squared. Obesity is defined as   having a BMI of more than 30.0 kg/m2.
 
 Compared to people with a   healthy weight (a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 kg/m2), obese individuals   and overweight individuals (who have a BMI between 25.0 and 29.9 kg/m2)   have an increased risk of diabetes, heart disease and stroke, and tend   to die younger.
 
 At the same time, people who are underweight (BMI   less than 18.5) also have an increased risk of death, perhaps from   complications related to being malnourished.
 
 
	
	
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