Americans are ballooning for a number of reasons, including our fondness for
fried food, sugary drinks, cheap, pre-packaged foods, processed meats, our
sedentary lifestyle, particularly television-watching, too little sleep, and a
lack of exercise. Obesity is associated with diabetes, heart disease,
complications in pregnancy, strokes, liver disease —the list goes on and on. The
obesity epidemic is also responsible for increased healthcare use and
expenditures. Kentucky is the most obese state, and Colorado is the least
obese.
Researchers
predict that
the cost of obesity in the U.S. is likely to reach $344 billion by 2018.
3. Anxiety disorders.Americans are freaking out. Researchers
have looked at the prevalence of various types of mental illness around the
globe and found that the U.S. is the
world
champion in anxiety. According to the 2009 results of the World Health
Organization’s World Mental Health Survey, 19 percent of Americans were found to
experience a clinical anxiety disorder over a given 12-month period. The
National Institutes of Health puts the number at
18 percent of
adults, which means that at least 40 million Americans are suffering.
Researchers have found that anxiety disorders, which include several
varieties such as generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder,
and post-traumatic stress disorder
,take a tremendous toll on
the population. Often, anxiety disorders are associated with other ailments such
as chronic pain and they tend to limit the sufferer’s participation in daily
activities. The disorders are more prevalent in women, and only a third of
sufferers receive treatment specifically addressed at anxiety.
The Anxiety and Depression Association of America
finds that
people suffering from anxiety disorders are up to five times more likely to go
to the doctor in general and six times more likely to be hospitalized for
psychiatric disorders than others.
4. Small arms ownership.The Graduate Institute of
International Studies in Geneva
ranks the
U.S. number one in both the total number of civilian firearms and in per capita
ownership of small firearms, beating out recent war zones like Yemen, Serbia and
Iraq.
In fact, we may even have more guns in the U.S. than we have people: The
rate of private
gun ownership in the U.S. was tabulated at 101.05 firearms per 100
individuals in one study. According to a recent report on CNN, Americans own as
many as one-third of the guns in the entire world. Research also shows that
while the number of households with guns has declined, current gun owners are
stockpiling more guns. Part of this concentration seems to stem from the fact
that guns are primarily marketed to people who already own guns.
A related statistic: In the U.S., the gun-related murder rate is the
second
highest in the developed world. Only Mexico, where the ongoing drug war
expands the number, has us beat.
5. Most people behind bars.Incarceration rates in the U.S.
blow right past the likes of Russia, Cuba, Iran or China. According to the
International Center for Prison Studies, the U.S. locks up
716
out of every 100,000 people. Norway, in contrast, only puts 71 out of
100,000 in the clink. Japan jails 54 and Iceland locks up only 47 out of
100,000.
The
latest
stats show that the total prison population of the U.S., including pre-trial
detainees and remand prisoners, is 2,239,751. These people are behind bars at
4,575 different facilities. The estimated capacity of our prisons, by the way,
is only 2,134,000. In 2010, there were an
estimated 70,792
juveniles locked away.
Racism is rife in the prison system, with blacks and Hispanics
disproportionately represented. Inhumane conditions abound, from poor care for
those suffering from serious diseases like
HIV/AIDS to
the torture of solitary confinement to rape to abuse of the mentally ill.
Debtor’s prisons are thought to be a relic of the 19th century, but starting in
2011, in the U.S. you can find yourself
imprisoned
for debt in several states, including Florida. High rates of imprisonment
seem to derive from a number of factors, including long sentences, the
incarceration of non-violent offenders (20 percent of the prison population is
made up of drug offenders) and the privatization trend, in which private
corporations rely on “growth” models to increase their profits.
6. Energy use per person.The U.S. is the
global leader in the amount of
energy
use per person. We get top billing in
electricity
consumption, we’re miles ahead of everybody in
oil
consumption, and when it comes to
coal
consumption, we’re number two, right behind China.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration
reports that
Americans account for nearly 19 percent of Planet Earth’s total primary energy
consumption, which comes from petroleum, natural gas, coal, nuclear, and
renewable energy. About
one-quarter of
primary energy
consumed in the U.S. in 2011 was supplied came from
natural gas, made cheap through fracking.
Factors contributing to high use include the cost of heating and cooling
increasingly large homes, electricity requirements for home electronics, the
high amount of energy required to produce consumer goods in the industrial
sector, and transportation usage.
U.S. energy consumption almost
tripled from
1950 to 2007, driven by population growth and increased standards of living, and
then dipped in 2009 due to the Great Recession. The U.S. is predicted to
experience a slight decline in energy use in the coming years, but world energy
demand is on pace to double by 2050.
7. Health expenditures. The U.S. devotes more of its economy
to health than any other country, 17.6 percent of GDP in 2010, and the trend is
slanted upward. We spend more in every category of healthcare, especially in
administration costs, due to the existence of thousands of different insurance
companies.
Yet the Commonwealth Fund
ranked the
U.S. dead last in healthcare quality among similar countries, while noting that
U.S. care is the most expensive. A coronary bypass in the U.S., for example,
costs 50 percent more than it would cost you in Canada, Australia and France,
and twice as much as you’d pay in Germany.
Despite all the money sloshing around, the U.S. has fewer physicians per
person than most other OECD countries, fewer hospital beds, and a lower life
expectancy at birth, according to a
recent
PBS report. The same report stated that the U.S. spent $8,233 on health per
person in 2010. The next highest spenders, Norway, the Netherlands and
Switzerland spent at least $3,000 less per person.
8. Cocaine use.When it comes to cocaine use, we’ve got
a
tie with Spain. In both countries, according to the 2008 World Drug Report
released by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, three percent of adults and teens
say they’ve given it a try.
Between 2006 and 2010, cocaine use is reported to have
declined
significantly in the U.S., but demand has by no means disappeared: about 2
million Americans are regular users (crack users account for about 700,000 of
these). Colombia was once the
major
supplier of cocaine to Americans, but it has now fallen behind Bolivia and
Peru, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Cocaine is the
second most popular drug behind pot, but unlike marijuana, it is associated with
high rates of death, particularly due to cardiac arrest.
Interesting factoid: Cocaine has a nasty link to industrial capitalism. It
first became popular with laborers as a way of increasing productivity, and
employers often supplied the drug
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