By JAIME A. ZEA,
Associated Press Writer
Sun Sep 28, 10:54 AM ET
Abraham Leon was getting a checkup when he found out he had high blood pressure
and was at risk of developing diabetes.
On the spot, the 5-foot-6-inch, 240-pound lab researcher joined "Vamos
Por Un Million de Kilos" (Let's Lose a Million Kilos), a national campaign
to get Mexicans to collectively trim about 2 million pounds.
The project is one of several new efforts to fight obesity in Mexico, which
is on track to catch up with the United States within a decade as one of the
world's fattest countries, according to the Mexican government. Nearly half
of Mexico's 110 million people are overweight, and the number of fat children
has climbed 8 percent a year over the last decade.
"The longer we carry this excess weight, the more serious the problem
becomes," said Dr. Samuel Flores Huerta, director of the Department of
Community Health at Children's Hospital. "Obesity is costing this country
a lot of money."
Mexico is working to mandate more physical education in public schools and
encourage employers and unions to give workers time for exercise. The administration
of President Felipe Calderon says it has built or renovated more than 800
public sports facilities around the country. The National Institute of Public
Health is promoting food education and healthier choices in schools, such
as fruits and vegetables instead of chips and soda.
Mexican cuisine has always been high in fat and carbohydrates. But for decades,
people living in small villages could not grow enough crops to eat a lot and
had to travel long distances to gather more food.
Now, as the middle class grows and more people move to cities seeking work,
diets have become laden with processed and fast foods. At the same time, doctors
say, Mexicans spend more time in sitting in cars or watching TV.
The country has the disease rates to prove it. According to government statistics,
new cases of high blood pressure increased 24 percent in Mexico in just six
years, from 2000 to 2006. New cases of Type 2 diabetes, believed to be linked
in part to obesity, jumped 31 percent during that time.
Companies spend a lot to market unhealthy foods in Mexico, said Margarita
Safdie, an investigator at the public health institute. In one so-called health-conscious
promotion, a company offered a free bottle of water to anyone buying two soft
drinks.
"It should be the other way around," Safdie said. "It's not
that healthy food is much more expensive. What happens is that calories have
become cheaper."
At Alvaro Lozano's taco stand in downtown Mexico City, customers line up every
day for a choice of fatty meats on two corn tortillas washed down with a sugary
soft drink. He said his customers are more concerned about money and time
than about health.
Mexicans have also developed a taste for fast food.
"The food is good, and sometimes I don't feel like cooking," said
Ana Lopez, 35, a Mexico City homemaker dining at Kentucky Fried Chicken on
the Zona Rosa pedestrian mall.
"Vamos Por Un Million de Kilos" came out of a promotional campaign
by the Televisa media company, launched after its sports department noticed
a certain irony.
"Some of our sportscasters were talking about fitness while they themselves
were obese," said Rafael Bustillos, Televisa director of sport. "It
was after that that we decided to start creating awareness about this issue."
Advertisers sponsored spots encouraging viewers to eat healthier foods and
showing easy and free ways to exercise in a country where few can afford gym
memberships. Then the Mexican Institute of Social Security signed on, recruiting
clinic patients like Leon for the weight-loss challenge. The campaign reached
its goal in just four months with 2 million people.
"We only recommend that people lose a half to a full kilo (1 to 2 pounds)
a week," said Dr. Ernesto Krug, a public health unit director. "More
than that is not healthy."
The campaign is now starting a second phase, "Vamos Por Mas Kilos"
(Let's Lose More Kilos), targeted more widely, including at adolescents.
Leon, 39, has dropped 40 pounds since May. Before his checkup, he ate tacos,
burgers and whatever his wife prepared, and didn't exercise. Now he has learned
to cook so he can choose healthy ingredients. He takes the stairs at work
and walks at least twice a week with his wife. He also tries to be a role
model.
"I have tried to tell my brother to do what I did. He's overweight,"
Leon said. "But he won't listen to me."
Leon plans to lose 20 more pounds. But already he worries less about heart
disease and more about how to replace his baggy wardrobe.
"I think that it has paid off," he said. "Physically, I feel
great and more secure with myself."
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Mexico pushes national campaign to lose weight.
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