By Michael Fumento on 1.18.07 @ 12:07AM
Pooch needs exercise, not a slim-fast pill. Same goes for his master.
It's enough to make you want to arf.
Our pooches are growing paunches at an alarming rate. Five
percent of the over 60 million dogs in this country are considered
obese, meaning at least 20 percent over ideal weight. Almost a
third more are considered overweight. So do we simply feed them
less food, healthier food, or exercise them more? That might call
the Humane Society down on you. Instead the FDA has approved a new liquid doggie drug from Pfizer called
Slentrol (pdf) that's supposed to block fat absorption
and reduce appetite. "Calm down boy! Have another tapioca
treat!"
Dog obesity, and pet obesity generally, is actually part of a
continuum that began in the 1970s. First we gave up on
self-control, leading to the adult obesity epidemic. Then we gave
up on kid control, leading to the child obesity epidemic.
"Exercise" became a four-letter word and somehow "eating properly"
also got reduced to one word with four letters.
Now just as we've abandoned self-control and kid-control, we've
abandoned efforts to control our pets' habits. This has led to
chubby Chihuahuas; fat foxhounds, pot-bellied poodles, butterball
beagles, porcine pit bulls, and rotund Rottweilers. Labradors need
liposuction.
Why?
"The parallels between human obesity and canine obesity are
striking," John E. Bauer, a veterinarian at Texas A&M
University told a reporter. "They live with us. So when we eat too
much, they eat too much. When we don't exercise enough, they don't
exercise enough. And when we snack between meals, they probably
snack between meals."
After all, it's not like Rover is sneaking into the freezer at
night and helping himself to Kibbles 'n Bits ice cream or that he's
capable of going on a biscuit binge. Dogs become fat because we
make them fat just as we make ourselves and our kids fat. The
New England Journal of Medicine has reported that parental obesity more than doubles
the risk of adult obesity among children under 10 years of age.
And having abandoned proper diet and exercise, we look for
magical potions.
The FDA recently fined four different supplement sellers that
make weight-loss claims as unsubstantiated as a witch's testimonial
for eye of newt. Now Coca-Cola is teaming up with Nestle to offer
an alleged weight-loss drink, Enviga. The medical substantiation
for Enviga's wondrous properties is based on a study lasting all of three days. (Read: Worthless) No
doubt people will drink Enviga to balance that monstrous 64-ounce
cup of Coca-Coca Classic they just drank that had a lid to keep
them from falling in.
In fact over 20 percent of our calories now come from drinks,
which is stunning considering the vast cornucopia of diet drinks
including one that's not only fat-free and carb-free but cost-free
called "water." Try it sometime.
Vastly more of us are also resorting to bariatric surgery, which is
risky and requires permanent dietary supplementation. Only8 percent of bariatric patients ultimately
achieve normal weight. Yet from 1998 to 2004, the total number of
these operations jumped nine-fold, from 13,386 to 121,055. Children
as young as 12 are having their stomachs stapled and their bellies
banded.
Further while Slentrol may help dogs, drugs have done little to
help humans. It's rare to lose more than 5 percent to 10 percent
of your weight with them and many people won't even take
appetite-reducing medicine because, after all, it reduces their
appetite!
And folks, this ain't just about looks.
In dogs, overweight causes diabetes, liver disease, and
arthritis. That doesn't count all the bennies they lose from lack
of exercise. In humans, "Obesity is a risk factor for many serious
illnesses including heart disease, hypertension, stroke,
respiratory disease, arthritis, and certain types of cancer"
according to the International Obesity Task Force. It's given rise to a
tremendous increase in type 2 diabetes and even causes birth
defects in offspring of overweight mothers. A 2004 study from the California-based Rand Corporation
found a striking increase in disability among Americans caused by
the rise in obesity.
Fat also costs a fortune. "Annual U.S. obesity-attributable
medical expenditures are estimated at $75 billion," a January 2004
Obesity Research study concluded. The tab is assuredly far
heftier now.
So let's be clear. Over-the-counter potions don't work.
Prescription medicine barely works. Surgery, reserved only for the
morbidly obese, won't get you to a healthy weight. After your 15th
diet book promising you can lose weight if you just eat more or
less carbs, consume foods in the right combinations, or eat lots
more chocolate (Seriously), you catch on that they don't work
either.
So what does? I'm sorry, but there has to be an element of
discipline. Repeat after me: There is NO magic! Neither are
McDonald's, KFC, and Costco with its 10-pound bags of cheesy-poofs
going to make it easy for you. But every calorie you keep out of
your mouth and every calorie you burn off with walking or jogging
or bicycling or simply parking your car in the farthest
space from the store helps. You can start right now by taking Rover
for a run. (Just don't forget the pooper scooper and plastic
bag.)
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