In
the
USA,
the
longer
you
stay,
the
bigger
you
get
Posted
Sept.
7,
2000
World
Science
Staff
It's
widely
known
that
Americans
are
among
the
world’s
fattest
people.
Now,
new
research
suggests
foreigners
living
in
the
United
States
also
quickly
start
putting
on
weight
–
and
the
longer
they
stay,
the
bigger
they
get.
At
least,
researchers
found
that
this
was
the
case
for
174
low-income
immigrant
women
living
in
Hartford,
Conn.
Although
the
sample
size
was
relatively
small
and
restricted
to
one
ethnic
group,
the
findings
seem
to
fit
a
growing
pattern.
Several
other
studies
have
also
shown
that
people
“often
experience
weight
gain
when
they
migrate
to
new
countries
where
the
prevalence
of
overweight
and
obesity
is
high,”
the
researchers
wrote
in
a
report
of
the
new
study,
published
in
the
September
issue
of
the
American
Journal
of
Physical
Anthropology.
Among
the
Hartford
women,
29
percent
of
those
who
had
lived
in
the
United
States
for
one
year
or
less
were
obese,
the
researchers
found.
By
contrast,
40
percent
of
those
who
had
lived
in
the
United
States
for
10
years
or
more
were
obese.
The
researchers
said
they
included
only
Puerto
Ricans
in
the
study,
not
in
order
to
single
out
this
group
but
to
make
the
results
statistically
more
reliable.
The
research
team,
headed
by
David
Himmelgreen
of
the
University
of
South
Florida,
wrote
that
“as
new
immigrants
acculturate,
they
begin
to
adopt
the
cultural
practices
of
the
larger
and
more
dominant
group,
including
food
consumption
and
physical
activity
patterns.”
Consistent
with
this,
the
researchers
also
found
that
immigrants
who
spoke
English
better
tended
to
be
more
overweight.
“Research
is
needed
to
more
adequately
define
the
process
of
acculturation
and
how
it
affects
food
habits,
food
consumption,
and
physical
activity
patterns,”
the
scientists
wrote.
This
research
could
then
be
used
to
design
better-targeted,
more
culturally
aware
public
health
programs
to
help
people
maintain
healthy
weight
and
exercise
levels,
they
added.
Researchers
at
the
University
of
Connecticut
and
the
Hispanic
Health
Council,
a
community
organization,
also
took
part
in
the
study.