North Carolina Is One Most Overweight & Obese States
With November being National Diabetes Awareness Month and obesity costing the health care system $147 billion each year, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released its report on 2021’s Most Overweight & Obese States in America.
To determine which states contribute the most to America’s overweight and obesity problem, WalletHub compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia across 31 key metrics. They range from the share of the overweight and obese population to sugary-beverage consumption among adolescents to obesity-related health care costs. Sadly. North Carolina made the list. We ranked #17 on the list as one of the most overweight and obese states in America.
20 Most Overweight & Obese States
- West Virginia
- Mississippi
- Arkansas
- Kentucky
- Alabama
- Tennessee
- Delaware
- Louisiana
- South Carolina
- Oklahoma
- Texas
- Ohio
- Georgia
- Missouri
- Kansas
- Iowa
- North Carolina
- Michigan
- Indiana
- Maryland
Colorado and Massachusetts have the lowest percentage of obese adults, 24.00 percent, which is 1.7 times lower than in Mississippi, the state with the highest at 39.70 percent. Utah has the lowest percentage of physically inactive adults, 16.10 percent, which is 1.8 times lower than in Kentucky, the state with the highest at 29.40 percent.
Colorado has the lowest percentage of diabetic adults, 7.50 percent, which is 2.1 times lower than in West Virginia, the state with the highest at 15.70 percent. Colorado has the lowest percentage of adults with high blood pressure, 24.50 percent, which is 1.7 times lower than in Mississippi, the state with the highest, at 40.60 percent. To view the full report and your state or the District’s rank click here.