Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 13–Senators Wiener, Cegavske, Titus, Rawson, Care, Mathews, Raggio and Washington

 

FILE NUMBER..........

 

Senate Concurrent RESOLUTION—Directing the Legislative Committee on Health Care to conduct an interim study concerning the medical and societal costs and impacts of obesity in Nevada.

 

    Whereas, Obesity manifests itself as one of our nation’s most

significant public health concerns as proven by recent statistics from

the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which reveal that in

the United States, approximately 38.8 million adults, 19.8 percent of

adults in the United States, are classified as obese, and an estimated

9 million children and adolescents between the ages of 6 and 19

years, 15 percent of that age group, are categorized as overweight;

and

    Whereas, These statistics represent such an extremely rapid

rise of obesity in our society over the last decade that members of

the medical profession attach the word “epidemic” to the problem, a

word usually reserved for massive outbreaks of infectious disease;

and

    Whereas, Obesity is a chronic disease, and studies show that

about one half of children who are overweight by the time they are 6

or 7 years of age remain overweight as adults and 75 percent of

adolescents who are overweight will remain overweight as adults;

and

    Whereas, Research has established that there is a direct causal

relationship between obesity and heart disease, hypertension, stroke,

elevated cholesterol, type 2 diabetes, gallbladder disease, arthritis,

breathing problems, gout, and forms of cancer such as uterine,

cervical, ovarian, breast, gallbladder, colorectal and prostate; and

    Whereas, Statistics for the year 2000 from the Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention disclose that 4,089 deaths in

Nevada were the result of heart disease and that 3,763 deaths were

caused by cancer, and obesity almost assuredly played a role in

many of these deaths; and

    Whereas, Not only does obesity affect physical health, but

obese persons may also experience low self-esteem, social

stigmatism, discrimination, poor body image and increased risk of

emotional problems, and disorders such as chronic depression,

anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder have commonly been

linked to obesity; and

    Whereas, According to The Surgeon General’s Call to Action

to Prevent and Decrease Overweight and Obesity, issued in 2001,

an estimated 300,000 people die each year from illnesses directly


caused or worsened by being overweight, a fact that prompted

former Surgeon General David Satcher to warn that obesity may

soon overtake tobacco as the leading cause of preventable death in

America; and

    Whereas, In 2000, the total costs of this epidemic in the United

States rose to an estimated $117 billion per year, consisting of $61

billion in direct costs for preventive, diagnostic and treatment

services for medical care and $56 billion in losses relating to

productivity in the workforce and the value of future earnings lost

by premature death; and

    Whereas, There is a compelling need for an aggressive

program of prevention and treatment because the direct and indirect

costs resulting from obesity are expected to increase rapidly as the

problem worsens and because the prevention and amelioration of

obesity could have a significantly positive impact on health care

costs in this state; and

    Whereas, Conquering the problem of obesity must begin with

the process of accumulating sound scientific data as a foundation for

fostering awareness of the role that genetics, behavior and

environment play in obesity and finding solutions to improve the

quality of life; now, therefore, be it

    Resolved by the Senate of the State of Nevada, the

Assembly Concurring, That the Legislative Committee on

Health Care is hereby directed to conduct a study of the medical and

societal costs and impacts of obesity on the State of Nevada; and be

it further

    Resolved, That a subcommittee must be appointed for the

study consisting of one Legislator appointed by the Majority Leader

of the Senate, one Legislator appointed by the Minority Leader of

the Senate, one Legislator appointed by the Speaker of the

Assembly and one Legislator appointed by the Minority Leader of

the Assembly, all of whom must have served on the Senate Standing

Committee on Human Resources and Facilities or the Assembly

Standing Committee on Health and Human Services during the

2003 Legislative Session; and be it further

    Resolved, That one person assigned by the Health Division of

the Department of Human Resources and one person assigned

by the Department of Education shall also serve as voting members

of the subcommittee; and be it further

    Resolved, That the Legislative Commission shall appoint a

chairman of the subcommittee from among the members of the

subcommittee; and be it further

    Resolved, That the study must include, without limitation:

    1.  An analysis of the fiscal impact of obesity on health care

costs and productivity in Nevada and a determination of possible


savings in health care costs resulting from the prevention and proper

treatment of obesity;

    2.  The identification of programs and practices that have been

established in Nevada and other states which are cost-effective and

could be implemented throughout Nevada;

    3.  Recommendations for programs to increase public

awareness regarding the causes, prevention, risks and treatment of

obesity;

    4.  An examination of the particular effects of the 24-hour

lifestyle and transient nature of some of the population of this state

on obesity;

    5.  Recommendations for programs and practices that

encourage healthy and balanced fitness and nutritional choices; and

    6.  Any other proposals for legislation relating to health care for

obesity that the committee may receive or develop; and be it further

    Resolved, That any recommended legislation proposed by the

subcommittee must be approved by a majority of the members of

the Senate and a majority of the members of the Assembly

appointed to the subcommittee; and be it further

    Resolved, That the Legislative Committee on Health Care

shall submit a report of the results of the study and any

recommendations for legislation to the 73rd Session of the Nevada

Legislature.

 

20~~~~~03