In this Monday, July 13, 2015 photo Earl Charles Williams Sr., 59, sits next to some of the medication he must take for his diabetes in his Chicago home. Williams was uninsured for about a year before a county-run clinic helped him sign up for care under the Affordable Care Act.  More than a dozen states that opted to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act have seen enrollments surge way beyond projections, raising concerns that the added costs will strain their budgets when federal aid is scaled back starting in two years.   (AP Photo/Christian K. Lee)

Obesity And Diabetes In KC Area Continue To Rise

August 7, 2015  |  Dan Margolies, KCUR 89.3  |  2 min read

While health trends in metropolitan Kansas City are generally headed in a positive direction, two exceptions are obesity and diabetes.

Every county from 2004 to 2011 saw growth in the rates of those conditions. There’s a glimmer of good news, however. Measured across shorter time frames, 2004-2007 and 2008-2011, the rates for those conditions have slowed in some counties.

Nearly 35 percent of American adults, or 78.6 million people, are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Some of the leading causes of preventable death are related to obesity, including heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and some forms of cancer.

Obesity is measured by body mass index, or BMI. If your BMI is 30.0 or higher, you’re considered obese.

Diabetes is a group of diseases in which blood glucose or sugar levels are above normal. According to the CDC, 29.1 million people in the United States have diabetes and 86 million are pre-diabetic.

Diabetes-related complications include heart disease, blindness, kidney failure and lower-extremity amputations. It’s the seventh leading cause of death in the U.S., according to the CDC.

The tables below show obesity and diabetes prevalence in the 11-county metropolitan Kansas City area. They were prepared by the Mid-America Regional Council and were released last week as part of the REACH Healthcare Foundation’s 2015 Regional Health Assessment for Greater Kansas City.

ObesityDiabetes Graphic

Tags:

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …

June 1, 2026

World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…

Related Stories

(L-R) Christina Hill and her grandmother, Lucy Wilkerson, pose for a photo with Christina’s kids, Hunter Hill Harris and Summer Hill Harris, at Lucy’s assisted living home in Grain Valley, Missouri. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

Caregiving Squeezes Households Between Young and Old 

Melissa Johnson knows her life is hardly unique. The Oak Grove, Missouri, woman cares for her infirm 72-year-old mother, who lives in her own home nearby.  She calls her mother daily. She brings dinner to her several times a week.  Johnson, who coordinates care with her aunt, a team of therapists, and a nurse, is…

Read More >
Rev. Tarris Rosell and sister Rosemary Flanigan

Feeding Tubes and Defibrillators

Let’s begin with two stories about the growing and important field of bioethics. The first is from Ryan Pferdehirt, the newly named Flanigan Chair in Bioethics at the Kansas City-based Center for Practical Bioethics. A hospital once asked him to consult on a bioethics case in which a son thought his desperately ill, hospitalized mother…

Read More >
People walk outside the Wyandotte County Public Health Department in Kansas City, Kansas. (Zane Irwin | Kansas News Service

After Tuberculosis Outbreak, Wyandotte County Parts Ways with Health Director

The director of the Wyandotte County Public Health Department is no longer with the agency, a spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. It comes after turmoil during the handling of the major tuberculosis outbreak, shown by emails obtained by the Kansas News Service. Elisha Caldwell had been head of the local health department while an outbreak of TB grew…

Read More >