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Investigators suspect a shipment of the drug was stolen from a storage building in eastern Kentucky

Dan Smoot, chief detective for an anti-drug task force in eastern Kentucky, said undercover narcotics investigators began purchasing the generic drug from street-level dealers earlier this week. Investigators suspect a shipment of the drug was stolen from a storage building in eastern Kentucky.

"When we first got the pills, we didn't know what they were," Smoot said. "They look nothing like the OxyContin we were familiar with."

OxyContin is a long-lasting version of oxycodone, a narcotic considered important therapy for many patients suffering chronic, 카지노사이트 - http://apoloniarasovic.me/ moderate to severe pain from illnesses such as cancer. The tablet, when swallowed whole, provides 12 hours of pain relief.

But the drug can produce a quick and potentially lethal high if it is chewed, snorted or injected. It has been linked to more than 100 deaths and bears the government's strongest warning label.

The Food and Drug Administration has given approval for Teva Pharmaceuticals of North Wales, Pa., and Endo Pharmaceuticals of Chadds Ford, Pa., to sell generic versions of the drug.

Law enforcement officials were dreading the release - http://www.stockhouse.com/search?searchtext=release of the generic version, saying it could increase availability and reduce prices of the drug on the black market.

Karen Engle, executive director of Operation UNITE, said the anti-drug task force is investigating the origin of the generic drug now available illegally in Kentucky.

"We actually had to call the poison control center to have them identify the substance for us," she said.

The generic drugs circulating in the mountain region may have been a stolen shipment intended for pharmacies in the region, Smoot said.

Kentucky State Police Detective Eddie Crum said a generic drug shipment was taken during an April 29 break-in at a storage facility in Pikeville. He said he was surprised that the generic drugs, which usually are transported in armored cars, were being stored so carelessly.

"We knew when the FDA approved generic OxyContin that it would end up in the region," Engle said. "But we didn't think it would be here before the pharmacies got it."

By Roger Alford

Women's risk of developing osteoporosis increases as they enter menopause and lose the bone-protecting effects of estrogen

The study involved 149,524 white postmenopausal women, age 65 on average, who had bone density scans. Of the 2,259 who broke bones during the following year, 82 percent had initial bone-density scores indicating thinning bones but not osteoporosis.

Only 18 percent of women with fractures had scores at or above the threshold many doctors use to define osteoporosis and to prescribe drugs.

The study was led by Dr. Ethel Siris at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and included researchers from Merck & Co., which makes the osteoporosis drug Fosamax and funded the study. A Merck doctor participated in a committee that oversaw the study design - http://www.travelpod.com/s/study%20design and analysis, Siris said.

Experts not involved in the study said the data appear sound.

The researchers suggested doctors consider lowering the threshold for prescribing osteoporosis drugs, especially for women who have certain risk factors that increase their chances of breaking a bone.

"My goal is not to sell medicine; my goal is to inform the debate," Siris said.

The research appears in Monday's Archives of Internal Medicine.

Dr. Leonard Serebro of Ochsner Clinic Foundation cautioned that while drug treatment can help prevent fractures in women with full-blown disease, more evidence is needed to show the same benefit in women with milder bone loss.

Women's risk of developing osteoporosis increases as they enter menopause and lose the bone-protecting effects of estrogen.

The National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends bone density screening for all women 65 and older and for younger postmenopausal women with at least one other osteoporosis risk factor, including smoking, low weight and 카지노사이트 - http://themes.blahlab.com/huglab/ family history of hip fracture.

Many doctors fail to screen women. And when doctors do the tests, they often do not prescribe medicine unless the results indicate full-blown osteoporosis — a bone-density score of minus 2.5 or less, the researchers said.

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>
They said a more reasonable approach would be using National Osteoporosis Foundation guidelines recommending that medication - http://www.caringbridge.org/search?q=medication be considered for women with scores of minus 2 or less; or minus 1.5 or less for those with at least one risk factor.

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>
However, bone-building medication costs around $70 monthly and some insurers will not cover it if women do not have full-blown osteoporosis, Serebro said.

"If you're a 40-year-old Camel smoker, you're going to smoke Camel whether it's under the shelf or at eye level," Myers said

The six largest cigarette makers spent a record $12.5 billion on advertising and promotions in 2002, the last year for which data is available, according to the Federal Trade Commission study.

That was an 11 percent increase from 2001, but U.S. sales fell about 5.5 percent to 376 billion cigarettes.

The largest chunk of the companies' marketing budgets were for discounts passed on to retailers and wholesalers, who then were expected to reduce cigarette prices for consumers. The companies spent nearly $8 billion on such discounts, 카지노사이트 - https://engines.aussiebabyboomers.com.au/ or about 63 percent of their total advertising and marketing expenditures.

The second-largest category was for promotional allowances that included paying retailers for prime shelf space. That cost the companies about $1.3 billion, according to the report.

Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said efforts by the companies to lower their prices and secure prime shelf space are aimed at hooking - http://data.gov.uk/data/search?q=hooking young people.

"The tobacco industry knows that the most price-sensitive population is children," Myers said. And he said young people are more apt to be influenced by shelf placement.

"If you're a 40-year-old Camel smoker, you're going to smoke Camel whether it's under the shelf or at eye level," Myers said.

David Howard, a spokesman for No. 2 cigarette maker, Reynolds American Inc., said his company is trying to win over adults, not kids.

"Our efforts are to communicate with and gain the business of adults who choose to smoke," Howard said. "It's against the law in all 50 states to sell to people who are underage."

Myers contended the tobacco industry knows those laws are loosely enforced and uses marketing to try to entice kids to start smoking.

"The unfortunate fact is that every day 2,000 kids light up for the first time," he said.

Howard said adult smokers are sensitive to prices, too, especially in recent years as cigarettes have become more expensive due to huge tax increases that have pushed prices to above $6 per pack in many places. Howard said leading companies are having to lower prices to compete with deeply discounted brands that have been gaining market share.

Money spent for traditional advertising, such as in magazines and newspapers, declined again in 2002, the report found. The industry spent about $132 million on that kind of advertising in 2002, compared with about $254 million five years earlier in 1997.

The decline is the result of the tobacco companies' $246 billion settlement with states in 1998 against costs of smoking-related illnesses. The settlement further restricted cigarette advertising, which already was barred from TV and radio.

The six companies surveyed by the FTC are Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., Commonwealth Brands Inc., Liggett Group Inc., Lorillard Tobacco Co., Altria Group Inc., and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Recently, Brown & Williamson and R.J. Reynolds merged, forming Reynolds American Inc.

The FTC began issuing its annual reports on cigarette marketing in 1967.

The decline is the result of the tobacco companies' $246 billion settlement with states in 1998 against costs of smoking-related illnesses

The six largest cigarette makers spent a record $12.5 billion on advertising and promotions in 2002, the last year for which data is available, according to the Federal Trade Commission study.

That was an 11 percent increase from 2001, 카지노사이트 - https://youmed.vn/tin-tuc/ but U.S. sales fell about 5.5 percent to 376 billion cigarettes.

The largest chunk of the companies' marketing budgets were for discounts passed on to retailers and wholesalers, who then were expected to reduce cigarette prices for consumers. The companies spent nearly $8 billion on such discounts, or about 63 percent of their total advertising and marketing expenditures.

The second-largest category was for promotional allowances that included paying retailers for prime shelf space. That cost the companies about $1.3 billion, according to the report.

Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said efforts by the companies to lower their prices and secure prime shelf space are aimed at hooking young people.

"The tobacco industry knows that the most price-sensitive population is children," Myers said. And he said young people are more apt to be influenced by shelf placement.

"If you're a 40-year-old Camel smoker, you're going to smoke Camel whether it's under the shelf or at eye level," Myers said.

David Howard, a spokesman for No. 2 cigarette maker, Reynolds American Inc., said his company is trying to win over adults, not kids.

"Our efforts are to communicate with and gain the business of adults who choose to smoke," Howard said. "It's against the law in all 50 states to sell to people who are underage."

Myers contended the tobacco industry knows those laws are loosely enforced and uses marketing to try to entice kids to start smoking.

"The unfortunate fact is that every day 2,000 kids light up for the first time," he said.

Howard said adult smokers are sensitive - http://www.deer-digest.com/?s=sensitive to prices, too, especially in recent years as cigarettes have become more expensive due to huge tax increases that have pushed prices to above $6 per pack in many places. Howard said leading companies are having to lower prices to compete with deeply discounted brands that have been gaining market share.

Money spent for traditional advertising, such as in magazines and newspapers, declined again in 2002, the report found. The industry spent about $132 million on that kind of advertising - http://edition.cnn.com/search/?text=advertising in 2002, compared with about $254 million five years earlier in 1997.

The decline is the result of the tobacco companies' $246 billion settlement with states in 1998 against costs of smoking-related illnesses. The settlement further restricted cigarette advertising, which already was barred from TV and radio.

The six companies surveyed by the FTC are Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., Commonwealth Brands Inc., Liggett Group Inc., Lorillard Tobacco Co., Altria Group Inc., and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Recently, Brown & Williamson and R.J. Reynolds merged, forming Reynolds American Inc.

The FTC began issuing its annual reports on cigarette marketing in 1967.

Around the globe, about 1.7 billion people should lose weight, according to the International Obesity Task Force

In an astonishing testament to globalization, this outbreak of girth is occurring just as doctors are winning the fight against a number of vexing diseases.

Except in the poorest nations of Africa, new drugs and improved public health have corralled, if not cured, infectious diseases like smallpox, malaria and influenza that used to kill millions.

Now a new enemy is emerging in the 21st century: our appetite. Around the globe, about 1.7 billion people should lose weight, according to the International Obesity Task Force. Of those who are overweight, about 312 million are obese - at least 30 pounds over their top recommended weight.

Already, a third of all deaths globally are from ailments linked to weight, lack of exercise and smoking. And perhaps most worrisome - http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/worrisome?s=ts is obesity's spread beyond wealthy western nations.

From the glaciers of Iceland to the palm-fringed beaches of the Philippines, there are now more fat people in the world than hungry people. And in extreme cases, people who are heavy since childhood could die as much as five to 10 years early.

"What's clear is that the developing world in particular is going to bear the enormous brunt of this weight gain," said Neville Rigby, policy director of the obesity task force.

"It's rapidly accelerating. We're even seeing obesity in adolescents in India now. It's universal. It has become a fully global epidemic - indeed, a pandemic."

U.S. nutrition scientist Barry Popkin agrees. He serves as a key adviser to the World Health Organization, which will propose the first global strategy on diet, physical activity and health next week at its annual meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

"When you find nary a country that's being missed, nary a rural area that's being missed, let alone an urban area," Popkin said, "you've got to say it's more than an epidemic."

No Country Immune

Certainly the United States remains a nation of scale-busters, with two of every three Americans overweight.

But there are a dozen places even worse:

Soon China will be the world's biggest country in more ways than sheer population, experts predict. It's a stunning reversal from the Mao Zedong era when as many as 40 million people starved in the Great Leap Forward famine of 1958-61.

Pursuing a new doctrine of a "well-off society," Chinese cities represent the world's biggest growth market for restaurants that until recently were considered to be counterrevolutionary. Now a new KFC, Pizza Hut or Taco Bell opens almost every day. Virtually every mainland home now has a television blaring junk food ads.

When university student Li Guangxu was a baby, rice was rationed. Now he eats cookies for breakfast.

Shopping at a CarreFour supermarket in western Shanghai, the solidly built young man fills a shopping cart with cookies, potato chips, soda and beer. The bustling new store devotes 12 aisles to snacks, including the bulk bins and freezers stocked with crackers, candy, and ice cream.

"I like these things. They taste great," Li said. "I don't have time for anything else. Older folks don't eat this stuff, but we do. We like snacks."

Most scientists believe our bodies have retained a prehistoric tendency to store fuel for periods of deprivation. Modern foods are so plentiful and so packed with calories that getting fat might be biologically difficult to avoid.

But the problem is rooted in something deeper than nutrition math. Pleasure and emotional comfort are basic instincts, and eating tends to stimulate those circuits in the brain, not unlike addictive drugs.

A food fix always is within arm's reach.

Hardware emporiums host parking lot barbecues, and airports sell gooey, hot cinnamon rolls. Gas stations have morphed into grocery stores, and grocery stores have ballooned into warehouses. You can buy potato chips whether you are trekking in Nepal or paddling a chocolate-brown river in Borneo's tropical jungles.

Who can resist? Almost no one.

"I compare the propensity to eat as somewhere between the propensity to breathe and the propensity to have sex," said Stephen Bloom, chief of metabolic medicine at the University of London's Imperial College. "Just saying, 'Stop eating!' doesn't work. It's much worse than stopping smoking."

Weight's Health Effects

Simply being fat won't necessarily kill you outright. And it's not weight alone that determines your risk from several diseases. But being overweight carries severe consequences.

Diabetes, heart disease and some cancers have been linked to weight, and all are on the rise.

Type 2 Diabetes is the illness most directly linked to obesity. A condition that often leads to heart disease and kidney failure, it is blamed for more than 3 million deaths a year. It afflicts 154 million people - nearly four times the number who have HIV or AIDS - and the WHO forecasts more than twice as many people will develop diabetes in the next 25 years.

Obesity can triple the risk of heart disease. One-third of all deaths globally - about 17 million - are blamed on heart disease, stroke and related cardiovascular problems, WHO figures show.

Some scientists predict it will outstrip infectious killers by the end of the decade.

Countries with extensive health care have stalled the onset of heart disease into old age and saved lives. But in much of the world, the latest drugs and arterial scouring procedures are not widely available.

In those countries, fatal heart attacks and strokes are much more common among younger, working age adults.

Researchers from Columbia University's Earth Institute examined Brazil, China, India, South Africa and the Russian republic of Tartarstan. They found that the heart disease death rate for adults ages 30-59 was up to twice as high as the U.S. rate. Among Russians in the study, the rate was up to five times higher.

Obesity was cited as a primary factor, along with smoking, lack of exercise and untreated high blood pressure. The researchers described the influence of unhealthy diets as "surprising."

"Never before ... have so many people been at risk of premature death," they wrote.

In South Africa, 11 percent of the population has HIV. Yet cardiovascular disease there still accounts for a higher rate of death among men and women under age 45.

Over the next 30 years, the trend in those counties is projected to worsen.

In India, more than a quarter of the 5 million people who die from heart attacks and strokes every year are younger than 65. This exceeds U.S. rates in the 1950s before aggressive cardiac care and prevention, said study co-author Susan Raymond.

Obesity also plays a significant, if poorly understood, role in many cancers. WHO data shows cancer accounts for about 12.5 percent of the world's deaths, and that rate is expected to increase dramatically, mostly in developing countries.

The fact that obesity is on the rise in these countries as well is due to a confluence of factors that researchers say must be examined.

The global trend toward weight gain and its associated illnesses is not restricted to the well-off. High-fat, high-starch foods tend to be cheaper, so poor people eat more of them.

In Mexico, 40 percent of its 105 million people live in poverty. Yet two-thirds of men and women there are overweight or obese.

In the slums of Sao Paulo, Brazil, 30 percent of the schoolchildren in 500 poor families have stunted growth due to poor diet. Yet, reports the Pan American Health Organization, about 6 percent of the children and 9 percent of the adults were obese, too.In southern Africa, Zambia, which experienced a food crisis in 2002, reports that 10 percent to 15 percent of urban schoolchildren are obese.

"It's a myth that you can't have poverty and obesity coexisting," said Tufts University nutritionist Bea Rogers.

How It Happened

Many factors contribute to the widening of the world's waistline.

"For the last 150 years we've been getting fatter," said Bloom. But now, he says, "everything has kind of come together."

For starters, there is cheap, plentiful food. In developing countries, people still spend 40 percent of their income on food, as opposed to 15 percent by American families.

But even in poor nations, the relative cost of eating is declining as the world's farmers are able to grow huge quantities of grain that is quickly processed and shipped without spoilage.

According to U.N. figures, the consumption of oils and fats over the last 30 years has doubled and is forecast to keep growing.

"In the developing world, it happened overnight," said WHO adviser Popkin, who heads nutrition epidemiology at the University of North Carolina. "One year they had very expensive butter and the next year edible oil came on the scene. It was a tenth of a cost and all of a sudden for very little money you could make your food taste better."

Nutritionists say more and cheaper sugar is another factor, despite the industry's strenuous denials.

James E. Tillotson, director of Tufts University's Food Policy Institute, calculates the average American drinks the equivalent of a 55-gallon drum of soda every year, compared to 20 gallons of sweetened beverages a year in 1970.

Increases almost as dramatic have occurred in Europe, and soft drink factories are increasingly popping up in developing countries.

Tillotson, who developed fruit-based drinks for Ocean Spray in the 1980s, says the beverage industry did not consider the health ramifications of their now-ubiquitous products.

"We never thought people would abuse them," he said. "What everybody wanted and liked has become dangerous."

Slowly, the food industry is responding.

McDonald's has healthier menus and is phasing out super-sizing. Kraft Foods, whose products range from Oreos to Jell-O in 150 countries, has a scientific advisory panel. Among the company's initiatives: capping the portion size of single-serving packaging.

Much of Big Food's response comes after failed efforts by obese people to sue fast-food chains for damages.

"A lot of chief executives are really in a state of shock right now," said international nutrition expert Andrew Prentice of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. "They've produced this stuff, cheaper and cheaper, feeding the world. All of a sudden, we're saying, 'Stop doing this!"'

Another factor is how food is promoted and distributed. Brightly packaged brands that remain safe for months have widely replaced fresh bulk foods sold in community markets.

In 1990, no more than 15 percent of food bought in Latin America came from supermarkets. Now, 카지노사이트 - http://bvnghean.vn/ 60 percent is from six supermarket chains.

Experts say that because the changes occurred so rapidly and medical care is so lagging, the developing world's obesity problem - combined with more cigarette smoking - could be both public health and economic disasters in countries that were verging on prosperity.

There are demographic changes, too. In many nations, women joining the work force created a demand for convenience foods.

"We already are tired from working and we buy only packaged foods," said Bertha Rodriguez of Mexico City. The 61-year old great-grandmother is a widow who supports herself by frying quesadillas in a streetside stand. One health concession: She now uses vegetable oil instead of lard.

"Before, we were at home preparing something light and nutritious," she said.

Technology Triumphs

People spend more time sitting in the car, at the computer and especially in front of the television - an average of 1,669 hours a year in the United States, a habit that is extending internationally.

With such low activity levels, as little as 100 extra calories a day translates into 10 pounds in a year.

"Physical activity is not on the front burner in many people's minds, said Stephen Blair, research director at the Cooper Institute of Aerobics Research in Dallas.

Technology is changing people's activity levels even in the poorest nations, where backbreaking work and hauling water from the community well was the norm.

In China's megacities, crowds once pedaled identical black bicycles to work. Now adults drive cars and ride trains and buses. In southeast Asia, farmers are replacing water buffalo plows with tiny tractors, and choosing crop chemicals over hand cultivation.

"It was done with the best of intentions," Bloom said. "Telephones, cars, computers all come from the freedom from hunger and fear. But it's had a bad side effect."

Governments in some developing nations are taking steps.

Singapore schools have added physical activities and replaced soft drinks with bottled water. Brazil is making school lunch programs serve fruits and vegetables.

Such efforts are among those the World Health Organization says will be necessary to prevent a worldwide crisis.

But it's a battle against human nature.

Experts say it's unreasonable to expect people with 21st century lifestyles and desires to return to a leaner, 1950s-era silhouette.

"It would be a huge public health achievement if we simply stopped the weight gain where it is now," Blair said.

"I think that's what we're stuck with."

By Emma Ross, Joseph Verrengia, Elaine Kurtenbach and Morgan Lee

Research and medical personnel who were in contact with Presnyakova during her treatment will remain under medical observation for three weeks, she said in a telephone interview

In addition to the dead, 14 other people are infected with the hemorrhagic fever, WHO said. The U.N. agency said a known form of the virus was responsible for the outbreak.

On Saturday, WHO said it believed a new, milder strain of Ebola could have caused the outbreak. This was wrong, said Dick Thompson, spokesman for the U.N. health agency.

"The reason was that initial lab tests were very confusing," Thompson said.

Meanwhile, a Russian researcher has died after sticking herself with a needle containing the deadly Ebola virus, her organization said Tuesday.

The accident occurred on May 5, when Antonina Presnyakova was conducting research on Ebola, a virus for which no vaccine or remedy exists, said Natalia Skultetskaya, a spokeswoman for the Vektor State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology outside Novosibirsk in central Siberia.

Skultetskaya said that efforts to save Presnyakova failed and she died on May 19 at a special hospital located on the territory of the center. Research and medical personnel who were in contact with Presnyakova during her treatment will remain under medical observation for three weeks, she said in a telephone interview.

Skultetskaya denied a report in The New York Times that the center was slow to inform the World Health Organization about the incident, 카지노사이트 - http://www.lakikataberna.com/ reporting it only last week. She said the case was reported immediately to both the Russian Health Ministry and the WHO.

"We received all the necessary medical assistance," Skultetskaya said. "On the WHO's advice, we had a conference call involving a doctor who treated Ebola patients in Africa."

The incident was the third case of accidental contraction of a deadly virus at Vektor, which served as a top biological weapons laboratory in Soviet times.

One Vektor researcher accidentally contracted the Marburg virus and died in 1988, while another worker contracted the same virus and survived in 1990, Skultetskaya said.

In a 1996 incident at another Russian biological research center, the Defense Ministry's Virology Center in Sergiyev Posad near Moscow, a worker accidentally contracted the Ebola virus and died, Skultetskaya said.

Ebola is spread by contact - http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/search/?q=contact with body fluids, including sweat and saliva. Outbreaks of the disease are rare, and no one knows where the virus lives when it is not infecting humans. The disease usually kills its victims so fast that it also destroys the host for the virus.

Skultetskaya said Vektor was conducting research on the Ebola and Marburg viruses to develop vaccines for the lethal diseases.

Obesity was cited as a primary factor, along with smoking, lack of exercise and untreated high blood pressure

In an astonishing testament to globalization, this outbreak of girth is occurring just as doctors are winning the fight against a number of vexing diseases.

Except in the poorest nations of Africa, new drugs and improved public health have corralled, if not cured, infectious diseases like smallpox, malaria and influenza that used to kill millions.

Now a new enemy is emerging in the 21st century: our appetite. Around the globe, about 1.7 billion people should lose weight, according to the International Obesity Task Force. Of those who are overweight, about 312 million are obese - at least 30 pounds over their top recommended weight.

Already, a third of all deaths globally are from ailments linked to weight, lack of exercise and smoking. And perhaps most worrisome is obesity's spread beyond wealthy western nations.

From the glaciers of Iceland to the palm-fringed beaches of the Philippines, there are now more fat people in the world than hungry people. And in extreme cases, people who are heavy since childhood could die as much as five to 10 years early.

"What's clear is that the developing world in particular is going to bear the enormous brunt of this weight gain," said Neville Rigby, policy director of the obesity task force.

"It's rapidly accelerating. We're even seeing obesity in adolescents in India now. It's universal. It has become a fully global epidemic - indeed, a pandemic."

U.S. nutrition scientist Barry Popkin agrees. He serves as a key adviser to the World Health Organization, which will propose the first global strategy on diet, physical activity and health next week at its annual meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

"When you find nary a country that's being missed, nary a rural area that's being missed, let alone an urban area," Popkin said, "you've got to say it's more than an epidemic."

No Country Immune

Certainly the United States remains a nation of scale-busters, with two of every three Americans overweight.

But there are a dozen places even worse:

Soon China will be the world's biggest country in more ways than sheer population, experts predict. It's a stunning reversal from the Mao Zedong era when as many as 40 million people starved in the Great Leap Forward famine of 1958-61.

Pursuing a new doctrine of a "well-off society," Chinese cities represent the world's biggest growth market for restaurants that until recently were considered to be counterrevolutionary. Now a new KFC, Pizza Hut or Taco Bell opens almost every day. Virtually every mainland home now has a television blaring junk food ads.

When university student Li Guangxu was a baby, rice was rationed. Now he eats cookies for breakfast.

Shopping at a CarreFour supermarket in western Shanghai, the solidly built young man fills a shopping cart with cookies, potato chips, soda and beer. The bustling new store devotes 12 aisles to snacks, including the bulk bins and freezers stocked with crackers, candy, and ice cream.

"I like these things. They taste great," Li said. "I don't have time for anything else. Older folks don't eat this stuff, but we do. We like snacks."

Most scientists believe our bodies have retained a prehistoric tendency to store fuel for periods of deprivation. Modern foods - http://www.caringbridge.org/search?q=Modern%20foods are so plentiful and so packed with calories that getting fat might be biologically difficult to avoid.

But the problem is rooted in something deeper than nutrition math. Pleasure and emotional comfort are basic instincts, and eating tends to stimulate those circuits in the brain, not unlike addictive drugs.

A food fix always is within arm's reach.

Hardware emporiums host parking lot barbecues, and airports sell gooey, hot cinnamon rolls. Gas stations have morphed into grocery stores, and grocery stores have ballooned into warehouses. You can buy potato chips whether you are trekking in Nepal or paddling a chocolate-brown river in Borneo's tropical jungles.

Who can resist? Almost no one.

"I compare the propensity to eat as somewhere between the propensity to breathe and the propensity to have sex," said Stephen Bloom, chief of metabolic medicine at the University of London's Imperial College. "Just saying, 'Stop eating!' doesn't work. It's much worse than stopping smoking."

Weight's Health Effects

Simply being fat won't necessarily kill you outright. And it's not weight alone that determines your risk from several diseases. But being overweight carries severe consequences.

Diabetes, heart disease and some cancers have been linked to weight, and all are on the rise.

Type 2 Diabetes is the illness most directly linked to obesity. A condition that often leads to heart disease and kidney failure, it is blamed for more than 3 million deaths a year. It afflicts 154 million people - nearly four times the number who have HIV or AIDS - and the WHO forecasts more than twice as many people will develop diabetes in the next 25 years.

Obesity can triple the risk of heart disease. One-third of all deaths globally - about 17 million - are blamed on heart disease, stroke and related cardiovascular problems, WHO figures show.

Some scientists predict it will outstrip infectious killers by the end of the decade.

Countries with extensive health care have stalled the onset of heart disease into old age and saved lives. But in much of the world, the latest drugs and arterial scouring procedures are not widely available.

In those countries, fatal heart attacks and strokes are much more common among younger, working age adults.

Researchers from Columbia University's Earth Institute examined Brazil, China, India, South Africa and the Russian republic of Tartarstan. They found that the heart disease death rate for adults ages 30-59 was up to twice as high as the U.S. rate. Among Russians in the study, the rate was up to five times higher.

Obesity was cited as a primary factor, along with smoking, lack of exercise and untreated high blood pressure. The researchers described the influence of unhealthy diets as "surprising."

"Never before ... have so many people been at risk of premature death," they wrote.

In South Africa, 11 percent of the population has HIV. Yet cardiovascular disease there still accounts for a higher rate of death among men and women under age 45.

Over the next 30 years, the trend in those counties is projected to worsen.

In India, more than a quarter of the 5 million people who die from heart attacks and strokes every year are younger than 65. This exceeds U.S. rates in the 1950s before aggressive cardiac care and prevention, said study co-author Susan Raymond.

Obesity also plays a significant, if poorly understood, role in many cancers. WHO data shows cancer accounts for about 12.5 percent of the world's deaths, and that rate is expected to increase dramatically, mostly in developing countries.

The fact that obesity is on the rise in these countries as well is due to a confluence of factors that researchers say must be examined.

The global trend toward weight gain and its associated illnesses is not restricted to the well-off. High-fat, high-starch foods tend to be cheaper, so poor people eat more of them.

In Mexico, 40 percent of its 105 million people live in poverty. Yet two-thirds of men and women there are overweight or obese.

In the slums of Sao Paulo, Brazil, 30 percent of the schoolchildren in 500 poor families have stunted growth due to poor diet. Yet, reports the Pan American Health Organization, about 6 percent of the children and 카지노사이트 - http://f-library.com/daily/ 9 percent of the adults were obese, too.In southern Africa, Zambia, which experienced a food crisis in 2002, reports that 10 percent to 15 percent of urban schoolchildren are obese.

"It's a myth that you can't have poverty and obesity coexisting," said Tufts University nutritionist Bea Rogers.

How It Happened

Many factors contribute to the widening of the world's waistline.

"For the last 150 years we've been getting fatter," said Bloom. But now, he says, "everything has kind of come together."

For starters, there is cheap, plentiful food. In developing countries, people still spend 40 percent of their income on food, as opposed to 15 percent by American families.

But even in poor nations, the relative cost of eating is declining as the world's farmers are able to grow huge quantities of grain that is quickly processed and shipped without spoilage.

According to U.N. figures, the consumption of oils and fats over the last 30 years has doubled and is forecast to keep growing.

"In the developing world, it happened overnight," said WHO adviser Popkin, who heads nutrition epidemiology at the University of North Carolina. "One year they had very expensive butter and the next year edible oil came on the scene. It was a tenth of a cost and all of a sudden for very little money you could make your food taste better."

Nutritionists say more and cheaper sugar is another factor, despite the industry's strenuous denials.

James E. Tillotson, director of Tufts University's Food Policy Institute, calculates the average American drinks the equivalent of a 55-gallon drum of soda every year, compared to 20 gallons of sweetened beverages a year in 1970.

Increases almost as dramatic have occurred in Europe, and soft drink factories are increasingly popping up in developing countries.

Tillotson, who developed fruit-based drinks for Ocean Spray in the 1980s, says the beverage industry did not consider the health ramifications of their now-ubiquitous products.

"We never thought people would abuse them," he said. "What everybody wanted and liked has become dangerous."

Slowly, the food industry is responding.

McDonald's has healthier menus and is phasing out super-sizing. Kraft Foods, whose products range from Oreos to Jell-O in 150 countries, has a scientific advisory panel. Among the company's initiatives: capping the portion size of single-serving packaging.

Much of Big Food's response comes after failed efforts by obese people to sue fast-food chains for damages.

"A lot of chief executives are really in a state of shock right now," said international nutrition expert Andrew Prentice of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. "They've produced this stuff, cheaper and cheaper, feeding the world. All of a sudden, we're saying, 'Stop doing this!"'

Another factor is how food is promoted and distributed. Brightly packaged brands that remain safe for months have widely replaced fresh bulk foods sold in community markets.

In 1990, no more than 15 percent of food bought in Latin America came from supermarkets. Now, 60 percent is from six supermarket chains.

Experts say that because the changes occurred so rapidly and medical care is so lagging, the developing world's obesity problem - combined with more cigarette smoking - could be both public health and economic disasters in countries that were verging on prosperity.

There are demographic changes, too. In many nations, women joining the work force created a demand for convenience foods.

"We already are tired from working and we buy only packaged foods," said Bertha Rodriguez of Mexico City. The 61-year old great-grandmother is a widow who supports herself by frying quesadillas in a streetside stand. One health concession: She now uses vegetable oil instead of lard.

"Before, we were at home preparing something light and nutritious," she said.

Technology Triumphs

People spend more time sitting in the car, at the computer and especially in front of the television - an average of 1,669 hours a year in the United States, a habit that is extending internationally.

With such low activity levels, as little as 100 extra calories a day translates into 10 pounds in a year.

"Physical activity is not on the front burner in many people's minds, said Stephen Blair, research director at the Cooper Institute of Aerobics Research in Dallas.

Technology is changing people's activity levels even in the poorest nations, where backbreaking work and hauling water from the community well was the norm.

In China's megacities, crowds once pedaled identical black bicycles to work. Now adults drive cars and ride trains and buses. In southeast Asia, farmers are replacing water buffalo plows with tiny tractors, and choosing crop chemicals over hand cultivation.

"It was done with the best of intentions," Bloom said. "Telephones, cars, computers all come from the freedom from hunger and fear. But it's had a bad side effect."

Governments in some developing nations are taking steps.

Singapore schools have added physical activities and replaced soft drinks with bottled water. Brazil is making school lunch programs serve fruits and vegetables.

Such efforts are among those the World Health Organization says will be necessary to prevent a worldwide crisis.

But it's a battle against human nature.

Experts say it's unreasonable to expect people with 21st century lifestyles and desires to return to a leaner, 1950s-era silhouette.

"It would be a huge public health achievement if we simply stopped the weight gain where it is now," Blair said.

"I think that's what we're stuck with."

By Emma Ross, Joseph Verrengia, Elaine Kurtenbach and Morgan Lee

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