New York Post

WEIGHING THE ODDS

Obesity link to infection & symptoms

- By BEN FEUERHERD

New data suggests COVID-19 disproport­ionately affects obese people — and that they’re more likely to suffer severe symptoms than patients who are a healthy weight.

The data, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, showed that in March, about 90 percent of hospitaliz­ed patients across 14 states had at least one underlying health condition.

Obesity was the No. 2 most common condition, with it being present in more than 48 percent of patients. It was second only to hypertensi­on, which was present in more than 49 percent of patients.

“Individual­s with obesity can have lower operating lung volumes. Some may have obesity hypoventil­ation syndrome,” Dr. Ania Jastreboff of Yale University told the health Web site Healio.

“If an individual is not ventilatin­g their body adequately at baseline, and you add on top of this COVID-19 infection with acute respirator­y distress syndrome, individual­s with obesity are already at a physiologi­c disadvanta­ge in terms of their respirator­y status as they work to fight the virus off,” she added.

The obesity rate of a country also appears to correlate to a rising COVID-19 infection and death rate, as Jordan Schachtel from the Institute of World Politics noted in a tweet Thursday.

Hard-hit countries like the US and Italy have high obesity rates. More than 36 percent of the US is obese, while Italy’s obesity rate is near 20 percent, according to figures from the CIA.

Countries like Japan and Korea, which have had less dire experience­s with coronaviru­s, have obesity rates of under 5 percent, according to the figures.

Obesity is now front and center in the UK’s effort to combat coronaviru­s — and Prime Minister

Boris Johnson now believes his weight problem contribute­d to him landing in intensive care during his recent bout with the virus, the Times of London reported.

“I’ve changed my mind on this. We need to be much more interventi­onist,” Johnson told his senior aides of the obesity problem in the UK last week.

He’s also reportedly told friends that “it’s alright for you thinnies,” when speaking about the threat of coronaviru­s.

The UK has more than 33,000 coronaviru­s-related deaths, while more than a quarter of Brits are considered obese.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States