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PubMed Central
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › articles › PMC9132142
Factors Associated With COVID-19 Death in the United States: Cohort Study - PMC
We found that obesity, diabetes, and cardiac disease were primarily responsible for the diminished association. Including these 3 factors in the age-sex adjusted hypertension model reduced the HR for hypertension from 1.30 to 1.03 (0.93-1.14). Similarly, the apparent impact of chronic liver ...
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WHO
data.who.int › dashboards › covid19 › deaths
COVID-19 deaths | WHO COVID-19 dashboard
The latest data for coronavirus (COVID-19) deaths from the WHO COVID-19 dashboard.
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CDC
cdc.gov › covid › risk-factors › index.html
People with Certain Medical Conditions and COVID-19 Risk Factors | COVID-19 | CDC
June 11, 2025 - The number of deaths among people over age 65 is 97 times higher than among people ages 18-29 years. Your risk of severe illness from COVID-19 increases as the number of your underlying medical conditions increases.
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Hindustan Times
hindustantimes.com › news › india news
Obesity, diabetes raise Covid-19 death risk | Latest News India
September 13, 2020 - The study found that 36.8% of hospitalised young adults were obese, 24.5% were morbidly obese, 18.2% had diabetes, and 16.1% had hypertension (morbid obesity, hypertension and being male are associated with greater risk of mechanical ventilation ...
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Springer
link.springer.com › home › journal of diabetes & metabolic disorders › article
The impact of diabetes and obesity on the severity and mortality of SARS-CoV-2 infection | Journal of Diabetes & Metabolic Disorders
September 1, 2025 - It has been shown that as many ... excessive activity of pro-inflammatory factors (cytokine storm). Its occurrence increases the risk of death by 15–20% [43]. Obesity and diabetes are chronic diseases that increase inflammation ...
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RGA
rgare.com › home › knowledge center › article › covid-19 and obesity: how excess weight increases risk of infection, severe illness, and mortality
COVID-19 and Obesity: How excess weight increases risk of infection, severe illness, and mortality | RGA
September 10, 2020 - Obesity raises the risk of infection, ... virus. Obesity-associated comorbidities such as hypertension, diabetes, and ischemic heart disease (IHD) are the three most common comorbidities observed in COVID-19 deceased patients....
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National Post
nationalpost.com › pmn › health-pmn › obesity-a-driving-factor-in-covid-19-deaths-global-report-finds
Obesity a driving factor in COVID-19 deaths, global report finds | National Post
March 4, 2021 - The report, which described a “dramatic” correlation between countries’ COVID-19 death and obesity rates, found that 90% or 2.2 million of the 2.5 million deaths from the pandemic disease so far were in countries with high levels of obesity.
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PubMed Central
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › articles › PMC7429998
Obesity and Mortality Among Patients Diagnosed With COVID-19: Results From an Integrated Health Care Organization - PMC
Emerging reports suggest that obese patients who are hospitalized with COVID-19 may have worse outcomes; whether this association extends to those who are not hospitalized is unclear. This study examines the association between obesity and death 21 days after diagnosis of COVID-19 among patients who receive care in an integrated health care system, accounting for obesity-related comorbidities and sociodemographic factors.
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Gallup
news.gallup.com › poll › 696599 › obesity-rate-declining.aspx
Obesity Rate Declining in U.S.
2 weeks ago - This is a statistically meaningful decrease representing an estimated 7.6 million fewer obese adults compared with three years ago. Meanwhile, diagnoses of diabetes — a lifetime disease that can be managed but not cured — have now reached an all-time high of 13.8%. Both metrics are part of the ongoing Gallup National Health and Well-Being Index.
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CDC
cdc.gov › covid › hcp › clinical-care › underlying-conditions.html
Underlying Conditions and the Higher Risk for Severe COVID-19 | COVID-19 | CDC
May 7, 2025 - ... Certain underlying medical ... conditions was also associated with severe COVID-19 illness. Obesity, diabetes with complications, and anxiety and fear-related disorders had the strongest association with death....
Find elsewhere
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Obesity Care Group
obesitycaregroup.com › blog-page › obesityandcovid19
Obesity and Diabetes as risk factors for COVID-19 — Obesity Care Group
April 23, 2020 - A new study among 5,350 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in the New York City area shows that nearly 57% had high blood pressure, while 41.7% were obese and 33.8% had diabetes.
Address: 350 Lincoln Rd, Second Floor Miami Beach, FL, 33139 United States
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PLOS
journals.plos.org › plosone › article › file pdf
PLOS One | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0330735 August 26, 2025 1 / 21
of hospitalized diabetic patients, admission ward differences, severity of disease, and variation in reason for admission. In · our study, infection was the second leading cause of admission, from which COVID-19 was the leading one. This might be · the reason for the majority of deaths. There is an increment of risk of severity and mortality associated with COVID-19 in ... Comorbidity, obesity, age groups 50–59 and ≥60, and knowledge about foot ulcer complications were predictors of
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AP News
apnews.com › article › virus-outbreak-us-news-health-technology-142575f3ba64158dd0b24a8e2fb23579
CDC has not reduced the death count related to COVID-19 | AP News
April 30, 2021 - But such claims misrepresent the data. A death isn’t excluded from the COVID-19 tally just because the person was obese or had diabetes or dementia.
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AHA Journals
ahajournals.org › doi › 10.1161 › CIRCULATIONAHA.120.047659
Obesity Is a Risk Factor for Severe COVID-19 Infection | Circulation
Initial data pointed toward older individuals being particularly vulnerable, as well as those with diabetes mellitus or cardiovascular (including hypertension), respiratory, or kidney disease. These problems are often concentrated in certain racial groups (eg, African Americans and Asians), which also appear to be more prone to worse COVID-19 outcomes.1 Increasing numbers of reports have linked obesity to more severe COVID-19 illness and death.1–3 In a French study, the risk for invasive mechanical ventilation in patients with COVID-19 infection admitted to the intensive treatment unit was m
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Frontiers
frontiersin.org › journals › medicine › articles › 10.3389 › fmed.2021.620044 › xml
Frontiersin
A significant number of studies reported that elderly patients and patients with diabetes, stroke, CKD, and COPD are associated with bad outcomes ( ... 54). Obesity, especially class 3 obesity, was associated with an increased rate of mortality among patients diagnosed with COVID-19.
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NPR
prod-text.npr.org › sections › health-shots › 2021 › 09 › 29 › 1041515129 › obesity-rates-rise-during-pandemic-fueled-by-stress-job-loss-sedentary-lifestyle
Obesity Rates Rise During Pandemic, Fueled By Stress, Job Loss, Sedentary Lifestyle
It makes people more vulnerable to hospitalization and death from COVID-19. At the same time, the pandemic worsened many of the social and economic factors that cause obesity, too. Job or income loss, for example, often means families cannot afford healthier food options. Related Story: Bariatric Surgery Works But Isn't Offered To Most Teens Who Have Severe Obesity · Gracia of Trust for America's Health says with obesity comes the threat of diabetes, heart or kidney disease, and cancer.
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CDC
cdc.gov › nchs › products › databriefs › db508.htm
Products - Data Briefs - Number 508 - September 2024
Obesity is a chronic condition that increases the risk of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, and certain cancers (1). Obesity and severe obesity prevalence increased from 1999–2000 through 2017–2018 (2). This report provides prevalence estimates of adult obesity ...
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ScienceDirect
sciencedirect.com › science › article › abs › pii › B978044318703200044X
Obesity, COVID-19 severity, and mortality - ScienceDirect
June 21, 2024 - Obesity raises the risk of cancer, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and sleep apnea. Because the immune system is weakened, infections become more serious. The way COVID-19 enters cells and triggers the immune response is similar to that of other coronaviruses.
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Cureus
cureus.com › articles › 99157-a-review-of-covid-19-in-relation-to-metabolic-syndrome-obesity-hypertension-diabetes-and-dyslipidemia
A Review of COVID-19 in Relation to Metabolic Syndrome: Obesity, Hypertension, Diabetes, and Dyslipidemia | Cureus
July 29, 2022 - Although severe cases and mortality of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are proportionally infrequent, these cases are strongly linked to patients with conditions of metabolic syndrome (obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia).