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Dear Colleague,

We are talking about body type. Having a pear-shaped body is SO much healthier.

Apple-shaped bodies have central (visceral) 
deposition of fat which increases the risk for 
serious medical conditions (e.g., stroke, 
diabetes, coronary artery disease). And central 
obesity can exist even in the absence of overall 
obesity.

If current trends continue, nearly all American 
adults will be overweight or obese by 2030. Even 
developing nations are seeing an increase in 
obesity and obesity-related complications.

What's especially alarming is that we have yet to 
find a "cure" or a consistent treatment that 
successfully addresses more than a minority of 
obese patients.

Should you give up and just tell your patients to 
eat what they like or is there something you can 
advise?

Please join Lawrence J. Cheskin, M.D., Director 
of the Johns Hopkins Weight Management Center and 
Associate Professor of Medicine and Public Health 
at Johns Hopkins University, and Scott Kahan, 
M.D., M.P.H., Associate Director of the Johns 
Hopkins Weight Management Center and Faculty 
Member, the Johns Hopkins University Preventive 
Medicine Residency Program, Baltimore, MD, as 
they present Current Management of Obesity. This 
activity has been approved for 1.0 AMA PRA 
Category 1 CreditTM:

<http://www.cyberounds.com/cmecontent/art468.html>http://www.cyberounds.com/cmecontent/art468.html

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The Editors of Cyberounds®

Leslie Carr, Ethel Chafetz and Harry Levy, M.D.

Victor B. Hatcher, Ph.D.
Associate Dean
Director of Center for Continuing Medical Education
Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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