UK's obesity rate ranks 132 out of 161 countries Evidence1 #387193 The UK's obesity rate places it 132 out of 161 countries in the Social Progress Index 2015 – based on WHO data of the percentage of the population with a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg/m2 or higher (age-standardized estimate), both sexes. |
Rank | Country | Obesity rate | 1 | Bangladesh | 1.1 | 2 | Ethiopia | 1.2 | 3 | Nepal | 1.5 | 4 | Vietnam | 1.6 | 5 | Madagascar | 1.7 | 6 | India | 1.9 | 7 | Congo, Democratic Republic of | 1.9 | 8 | Cambodia | 2.3 | 9 | Afghanistan | 2.4 | 10 | Burkina Faso | 2.4 | 11 | Niger | 2.5 | 12 | Timor-Leste | 2.9 | 13 | Laos | 3 | 14 | Chad | 3.1 | 15 | Burundi | 3.3 | 16 | Central African Republic | 3.7 | 17 | Myanmar | 4.1 | 18 | Zambia | 4.2 | 19 | Rwanda | 4.3 | 20 | Comoros | 4.4 | 21 | Japan | 4.5 | 22 | Malawi | 4.5 | 23 | Togo | 4.6 | 24 | Uganda | 4.6 | 25 | Guinea | 4.7 | 26 | Indonesia | 4.7 | 27 | Kenya | 4.7 | 28 | Mali | 4.8 | 29 | Sri Lanka | 5 | 30 | Congo, Republic of | 5.3 | 31 | Mozambique | 5.4 | 32 | Tanzania | 5.4 | 33 | Guinea-Bissau | 5.4 | 34 | Liberia | 5.5 | 35 | Bhutan | 5.5 | 36 | China | 5.6 | 37 | Pakistan | 5.9 | 38 | Philippines | 6.4 | 39 | Singapore | 6.4 | 40 | Benin | 6.5 | 41 | Sudan | 6.6 | 42 | Côte d'Ivoire | 6.7 | 43 | Sierra Leone | 7 | 44 | Nigeria | 7.1 | 45 | Angola | 7.2 | 46 | Korea, Republic of | 7.3 | 47 | Ghana | 8 | 48 | Senegal | 8 | 49 | Haiti | 8.4 | 50 | Thailand | 8.5 | 51 | Gambia, The | 8.5 | 52 | Zimbabwe | 8.6 | 53 | Tajikistan | 9.9 | 54 | Djibouti | 10.4 | 55 | Namibia | 10.9 | 56 | Cameroon | 11.1 | 57 | Cape Verde | 11.5 | 58 | Botswana | 13.5 | 59 | Mauritania | 14 | 60 | Malaysia | 14.1 | 61 | Turkmenistan | 14.3 | 62 | Switzerland | 14.9 | 63 | Gabon | 15 | 64 | France | 15.6 | 65 | Papua New Guinea | 15.9 | 66 | Denmark | 16.2 | 67 | Netherlands | 16.2 | 68 | Mongolia | 16.4 | 69 | Peru | 16.5 | 70 | Sweden | 16.6 | 71 | Yemen | 16.7 | 72 | Guyana | 16.9 | 73 | Lesotho | 16.9 | 74 | Italy | 17.2 | 75 | Kyrgyzstan | 17.2 | 76 | Morocco | 17.3 | 77 | Uzbekistan | 17.3 | 78 | Algeria | 17.5 | 79 | Greece | 17.5 | 80 | Romania | 17.7 | 81 | Colombia | 18.1 | 82 | Mauritius | 18.2 | 83 | Austria | 18.3 | 84 | Bolivia | 18.9 | 85 | Estonia | 18.9 | 86 | Belgium | 19.1 | 87 | Paraguay | 19.2 | 88 | Brazil | 19.5 | 89 | Honduras | 19.8 | 90 | Norway | 19.8 | 91 | Finland | 19.9 | 92 | Ukraine | 20.1 | 93 | Macedonia | 20.3 | 94 | Moldova | 20.4 | 95 | Cuba | 20.5 | 96 | Guatemala | 20.7 | 97 | Albania | 21.1 | 98 | Georgia | 21.2 | 99 | Croatia | 21.3 | 100 | Germany | 21.3 | 101 | Bulgaria | 21.4 | 102 | Iran | 21.6 | 103 | Portugal | 21.6 | 104 | Montenegro | 21.8 | 105 | Dominican Republic | 21.9 | 106 | Iceland | 21.9 | 107 | Ecuador | 22 | 108 | Latvia | 22 | 109 | Oman | 22 | 110 | Serbia | 23 | 111 | Poland | 23.2 | 112 | Armenia | 23.4 | 113 | Belarus | 23.4 | 114 | Cyprus | 23.4 | 115 | Swaziland | 23.4 | 116 | Luxembourg | 23.4 | 117 | Uruguay | 23.6 | 118 | Tunisia | 23.8 | 119 | Spain | 24.1 | 120 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 24.2 | 121 | Nicaragua | 24.2 | 122 | Canada | 24.3 | 123 | Kazakhstan | 24.4 | 124 | Ireland | 24.5 | 125 | Costa Rica | 24.6 | 126 | Jamaica | 24.6 | 127 | Slovakia | 24.6 | 128 | Azerbaijan | 24.7 | 129 | Lithuania | 24.7 | 130 | Hungary | 24.8 | 131 | Russia | 24.9 | 132 | United Kingdom | 24.9 | 133 | Australia | 25.1 | 134 | Israel | 25.5 | 135 | Panama | 25.8 | 136 | Suriname | 25.8 | 137 | Malta | 26.6 | 138 | El Salvador | 26.9 | 139 | New Zealand | 27 | 140 | Slovenia | 27 | 141 | Lebanon | 28.2 | 142 | Czech Republic | 28.7 | 143 | Chile | 29.1 | 144 | Turkey | 29.3 | 145 | Argentina | 29.4 | 146 | Iraq | 29.4 | 147 | Trinidad and Tobago | 30 | 148 | Venezuela | 30.8 | 149 | Libya | 30.8 | 150 | Syria | 31.6 | 151 | United States | 31.8 | 152 | Bahrain | 32.6 | 153 | Mexico | 32.8 | 154 | Qatar | 33.1 | 155 | South Africa | 33.5 | 156 | United Arab Emirates | 33.7 | 157 | Jordan | 34.3 | 158 | Egypt | 34.6 | 159 | Belize | 34.9 | 160 | Saudi Arabia | 35.2 | 161 | Kuwait | 42.8 | |
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- CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Social Progress Index 2015
Author: The Social Progress Imperative Publication info: 2015 Cited by: David Price 7:48 AM 19 April 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 399977UK's obesity rate ranks 132 out of 161 countriesThe UK's obesity rate places it 132 out of 161 countries in the Social Progress Index 2015 – based on WHO data of the percentage of the population with a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg/m2 or higher (age-standardized estimate), both sexes.648CC79C URL: |
Excerpt / Summary The Social Progress Imperative (SPI) is changing the way we solve the world’s most pressing challenges by redefining how the world measures success and putting the things that matter to people’s lives at the top of the agenda.
The Social Progress Index revolutionizes the solving of societal problems by enabling leaders to systematically identify and prioritize issues. The Social Progress Imperative’s network empowers leaders to convene all the right local actors, global partners, and subject-matter experts necessary to develop and deploy meaningful solutions. Together, the index and the network empower local actors to both identify shortcomings and deliver the solutions to improve them.
Traditional measures of economic growth no longer answer the most important questions. The Social Progress Imperative offers a holistic, 21st century assessment of the health of society—the Social Progress Index.
Relying only on a country’s GDP as the measure of progress provides an incomplete picture of human and societal development because it overlooks factors like access to electricity, health, property rights, and religious tolerance.
The Social Progress Index is used in tandem with GDP to provide a holistic assessment of a country’s overall progress.
The Social Progress Index examines social and environmental indicators that capture three distinct dimensions of social progress: Basic Human Needs, Foundations of Wellbeing, and Opportunity.
The Index has four key design principles:
Exclusively social and environmental indicators: The index focuses on indicators like indoor air pollution and women in school, not family income or individual employment.
Outcomes not inputs: The index assesses performance on indicators like access to electricity and suicide rates, not inputs like policies, laws, or levels of funding.
Actionability: The indicators used are specific enough, such as access to improved sanitation facilities, to pinpoint exactly what needs to be changed or maintained.
Relevance to all countries (societies): The index has been designed to measure performance of societies at all levels of income and on any continent.
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