Houston Chronicle Sunday

Back to office? It’s become a weighty issue

- By Elise Young

Jesse Weigel’s jeans barely buttoned and his dress pants were off limits. But he didn’t view his pandemic doughnut habit as a crisis until his 4-year-old had to extract him from a oncefavori­te shirt that bound his arms like sausage casing.

“She’s actually hanging off my collar trying to get my shirt off,” Weigel, a 35-year-old computersy­stems head engineer, recalled from his home in Steubenvil­le, Ohio. “The only way to do it was to rip it off my arms.”

Americans who soothed themselves with calorielad­en comfort foods are franticall­y trying to slim down for the perfect office bod. Gym membership­s are up, personal trainers are booked and digital subscripti­ons to WW, the company formerly known as Weight Watchers, were 16 percent higher at the end of the first quarter from a year earlier.

The pandemic-fueled isolation and anxiety meant more eating and less activity in a country where four in 10 adults are already obese, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In all, 42 percent of the population gained unwanted weight, averaging 29 pounds, according to the American Psychology Associatio­n’s annual stress survey. As COVID-19 swept the globe, obesity was among the conditions that put infected people at greater risk.

Some companies saw opportunit­y in what was labeled on social media as #Quarantine­15 and #PandemicPo­unds. Tracking virus outbreaks alongside stay-at-home restrictio­ns, Hershey Co. pushed s’mores, the gooey confection­s of chocolate, marshmallo­ws and graham crackers.

“What more perfect occasion than to share s’mores with the family over the backyard barbecue?” Michele Buck, the company’s chairwoman, president and chief executive officer, said at the May 17 annual general meeting.

“We altered our media and increased media in those markets where s’mores was starting to increase in consumptio­n.”

Even executives for Ralph Lauren Corp. — a company built on a fantasy of exclusive lifestyles, with clothing paraded by impossibly slim models — relished how its elasticize­d denim accommodat­ed customers’ new curves.

“More comfort, stretch, is playing right into the lifestyles or the COVID weight gain,” Jane Nielsen, the chief operating and finance officer, said in a June 17, 2020, call with during an Evercore ISI Research. She, too, had put on pounds, she added.

Even before COVID-19, almost a third of residents on average in the 100 largest U.S. cities had obesity, and 25 percent didn’t exercise in the previous month, according to astudy by the American College of Sports Medicine. Preliminar­y studies on the pandemic have found further reduced activity and healthy food intake, and increased stress and obesity.

 ?? Jessica Christian / San Francisco Chronicle ?? Workers are trying to drop their bad eating habits fueled by the pandemic’s anxiety and isolation.
Jessica Christian / San Francisco Chronicle Workers are trying to drop their bad eating habits fueled by the pandemic’s anxiety and isolation.

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