According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the average woman in the United States now weighs 166.2 pounds, which is almost the exact average weight for men in the 1960s. That decade, the average weight of a female in the United States was roughly 140 pounds.
It’s not only women who are getting larger, though. American men have also gained an average of nearly 30 pounds, with men in the 1960s weighing in at an average 166.3 pounds, compared to 195.5 pounds today.
Children are also gaining significant weight, with 17.7% of children between the ages of 6 and 11 considered obese, and 1 in 5 youth between the ages of 12 and 19.
In 2012, Americans came in third in a study of the world’s heaviest people, published in the MBC Public Health Journal. The countries of Tonga and Micronesia in the Pacific Islands came in first and second. A year later, the United States was surpassed by Mexico for the top spot.
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development predicts that these numbers will only continue to grow, projecting that three quarters of the United States’ population will be overweight by 2020.
Currently, 35.1% of US adults over 20 are considered obese, and 69% are considered to be overweight (including obesity).