The Colorado Paradox – The State High in Fitness and Drug Use

In March, 2013 Gallup pollsters released research showing that Colorado has the nation’s lowest obesity rate; 18.7% of adults are obese. This percentage on the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index was the only state to register below 20%. The second place state, Massachusetts, was almost 22%.

But the good news ends there.

The 2012 Statistical Abstract (table 204) reports that Colorado is also one of the most highly ranked states for use of select drugs (A ranking of 1 is worst and 51 is best – Washington, D.C. included) :

  • 25th cigarette smoking – 1,007,000 people, or 25.1% of the Colorado population, ages 12+.
  • 9th for binge drinking – 1,072,000 people, or 26.7% of the Colorado population, ages 12+.
  • 5th for any illicit drug use – 470,000 people, or 11.7% of the Colorado population, ages 12+.
  • 4th for marijuana use – 370,000 people, or 9.2% of the Colorado population, ages 12+.
  • 4th for any illicit drug use, other than marijuana – 183,000 people, or 4.6% of the Colorado population, ages 12+.

In each of these five categories, the percentage of Coloradans partaking in these vices is greater than the U.S. percentage.  Colorado’s Rocky Mountain high is truly a unique paradox.

This data is for the period 2007 to 2008, i.e. it is prior to the passage of Amendment 64.

 

Baseball, Drugs, and NAFTA

Jose Canseco is one of baseball’s most colorful, talented, flamboyant, and troubled athletes. Originally from Havana, Cuba, Canseco was at one time the leading Latin home-run hitter, with 462 dingers.

He is most notorious for his steroid use and tell-all book, Juiced, Wild Times, Rampant ‘Roids, Smash Hits and How Baseball Got Big. Canseco’s passion for the spotlight is matched by his love of playing baseball, i.e. his unwillingness to retire as a player. Since stepping down from the big leagues Canseco continued to play in the minors for teams ranging from the San Diego Surf Dawgs to the Worcester Tornadoes.

On February 15, 2012, the Daily Camera included a blurb quoting Brad Dixon of the Omaha World-Herald. He made the following comments about Canseco’s plans for the 2012 season as a 48 year-old player. Dixon stated, “Jose Canseco announced he’s making a comeback and joining a baseball team in Mexico. Mexican officials reacted by calling for an end to NAFTA.”

Wikipedia reports that Canseco actually joined the Quintana Roo Tigres, but was later banned for reported use of testosterone. The online resource did not mention whether Mexican officials were successful in repealing NAFTA.