Simple Solutions to Complex Problems

Via Sarah Kliff, the OECD’s Obesity Update 2012 provides an important example of a complex problem (soaring health care costs) that could be addressed, in part, by a relatively simple solution (healthier diet and exercise).

President Obama has caught plently of flak in the past for similarly modest proposals, like painting roofs white to reduce air conditioning and electricity costs, or keeping car tires properly inflated to improve mileage. Thankfully, that hasn’t stopped the administration from moving ahead with new rules for government-subsidized school meals, which must now include whole grains, reduced fat and salt, and twice as many fruits and vegetables.

It’s a step in the right direction. The OECD estimates that an obese person incurs 25 percent higher medical bills than a person of normal weight in any given year, with obesity responsibile for 5 to 10 percent of all health care expenditures in the United States. And that number should rise by 2020, when the OECD predicts three out of every four Americans will be overweight or obese. So, as employers and families struggle to pay ever-higher premiums, a renewed focus on practical, preventative health policy—like school nutrition regulations—is surely a step in the right direction.

Obesity

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