Most Popular Stories
Poll
Featured Jobs
-
Florida CDM Consultant
StaffPointe, LLC - Jacksonville, FL -
California Cardiologist CEx1066
StaffPointe, LLC - near Marysville , CA -
Massachusetts Neurologist
StaffPointe, LLC - near Boston , MA -
Indiana Infectious Disease
StaffPointe, LLC - north , IN -
Virginia Invasive Cardiologist
StaffPointe, LLC - southwest , VA
Events
- Free Webcast: Management Lessons from Mayo Clinic
Oct 30, 12pm EDT - World Health Care Congress
April 14-16, 2009 — Washington, DC - Fall Health IT Summit
Oct 27-28 — Los Angeles, CA
Paid Research Reports
- Stakeholder Opinions: Percutaneous Coronary Intervention - Adverse events with drug-eluting stents demand a new safety standard
- Impact of Pharmacogenomics on Public Healthcare Policy
- The Cardiovascular Disorders Market Outlook to 2012
- 2008 Trends to Watch: Pharmaceutical Technology
- Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement: Strategies for market access across the US, Europe, Japan and other key geographies
Popular Topics
Study: Despite earlier deaths, obese pay higher medical bills
New research suggests that young adults in their 20s who are as little as 30 pounds overweight may pay lifetime medical bills that are $5,000 to $21,000 higher than their normal-weight. Meanwhile, extremely obese young adults (70 pounds or more overweight) will incur $15,000 to $29,000 more in lifetime medical expenses than healthy-weight peers, according to a study in the journal Obesity. These numbers take into account that heavy people have shorter life expectancies.
The data varied by ethnicity. According to the study, medical expenses are much greater in obese white women than obese black women, probably because white women tend to use more health services at every weight level. Correspondingly, white men's costs at 70 pounds overweight were slightly higher than black men's costs.
To learn more about the study:
- read this USA Today piece
Related Stories
- AL charges state employees fees for health problems
- Obesity costs US employers $45 billion a year
- MI data suggests weight-loss surgery getting safer
- Blue plans see 18 percent drop in operating earnings for '07
- Trend: 'Evidence based' hospital design increasingly popular
- Study: Clot-sucking device cuts death rates for heart attacks
- Study: Hospitalized kids suffer too many infections
- ALSO NOTED: Number of uninsured young people rises; Study shows problems in physician EMR adoption; and much more...
- Study: Social networks can have impact on health behavior
- Study: Admission day dictates heart failure, length of stay
Comments
Post new comment
Home
| Subscribe | Advertise | Mobile Edition | RSS |
Privacy
| Site MapTHE FIERCEMARKETS NETWORKFierceFinance | FierceFinanceIT | FierceSarbox | FierceHealthcare | FierceHealthFinance | FierceHealthIT | Hospital Impact | FierceCIO | FierceCIO:TechWatch | FierceContentManagement | FierceMobileIT | FierceBiotech | FierceBioResearcher | FiercePharma | FierceVaccines | FierceIPTV | FierceOnlineVideo | FierceTelecom | FierceVoIP | FierceBroadbandWireless | FierceDeveloper | FierceMobileContent | FierceWireless | FierceWireless:Europe© 2008 FierceMarkets, Inc. All rights reserved. |
![]() |





