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We know that people with higher education obesity levels and socioeconomic status tend obesity to be healthier in general--exercising more, eating better, having less chronic disease. So here's a chicken-and-egg question: Does regular exercise improve obesity our status in life, or are people with improved status more likely to exercise and take care of themselves in other ways? Harvard-educated Nancy Adler is trying to figure all this out, at the Center for Health and Community at the University of California at San Francisco. One of the center's studies revealed this: If you take two groups of people with diabetes, one more educated than the other, the better-educated group will have fewer complications, even when given the same level of care. Adler wonders if that's because they follow instructions better, if the doctors identify more with them and thus give them more attention, or if something else is at work. To me, this brings up one of the most important questions of our times.
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