FAU Study Finds Concerning Rise in U.S. Teen Obesity Over a Decade

Teen, Scale, Weight

1 in 5 U.S. adolescents – 22.2% of high school students – is now classified as obese, a trend that carries serious physical and mental health risks extending into adulthood.


By gisele galoustian | 3/16/2026

Study Snapshot: 1 in 5 U.S. adolescents – 22.2% of high school students – is now classified as obese, a trend that carries serious physical and mental health risks extending into adulthood. To better understand these patterns, researchers from FAU’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine analyzed data from 2013 to 2023 in more than 85,000 U.S. students in grades nine to 12. Using the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, the most recent data available from the CDC, the team examined trends in overweight and obesity, as well as weight-loss efforts, across race, ethnicity, gender and grade level.

Results of the study show that overall obesity rose from 13.7% to 15.9%, peaking at 16.3% in 2021. Black and Hispanic adolescents consistently had the highest rates, with peaks of 21.2% and 20.2%, while Asian teens had the lowest rates, though their prevalence nearly doubled from 5.6% to 11%. At the same time, the proportion of students classified as overweight declined from 16.6% to 14.7%, mainly driven by decreases among males. Fewer adolescents reported trying to lose weight in 2023 (44.5%) compared with 2013 (47.7%), with declines most notable among 10th and 12th graders. Female adolescents, while more likely than their male counterparts to attempt weight loss, also showed a drop in engagement, highlighting a troubling gap between rising obesity rates and declining weight-management efforts. These patterns varied among subgroups of race, gender and grade, and emphasize the urgent need for targeted clinical and public health interventions to help teens adopt healthier behaviors and maintain realistic body expectations.

Nearly 1 in 5 teens in the United States is obese, putting their long-term health at serious risk. Obesity in adolescence leads to many deleterious medical conditions including diabetes, high blood pressure, sleep apnea, and mental health struggles with low self-esteem and depression.  

Understanding patterns of obesity and weight-loss efforts in U.S. adolescents is critical for shaping effective clinical and public health interventions. Yet, data remain sparse on whether and how adolescents attempt to lose weight.

To explore these issues, researchers from Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine analyzed obesity trends among 85,588 U.S. high school students (grades nine to 12) from 2013 to 2023 using the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, the most recent data available from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They examined patterns of overweight, obesity and weight-loss attempts, both overall as well as in subgroups of gender, grade level, race and ethnicity. Overweight describes adolescents above a healthy weight for their height, while obesity denotes a greater excess. Both adolescent overweight and obesity have been linked to higher health risks in the short and long term.

Results of the study, published in the Ochsner Journal, reveal a concerning rise in adolescent obesity over the past decade. Overall obesity among U.S. high school students climbed from 13.7% in 2013 to 15.9% in 2023, peaking at 16.3% in 2021. Black and Hispanic adolescents consistently had the highest rates, with peaks of 21.2% and 20.2%, respectively, while Asian teens had the lowest, though their prevalence nearly doubled from 5.6% to 11%. In contrast, the proportion of students classified as overweight declined from 16.6% to 14.7%, driven largely by decreases among male students.

Female students were more likely than their male counterparts to attempt weight loss, but overall, fewer adolescents reported trying to lose weight in 2023 (44.5%) than in 2013 (47.7%). Weight-loss efforts dropped most sharply among 10th and 12th graders, signaling a troubling gap in healthy behaviors as teens get older.

Male obesity rates rose steadily to a peak of 18.9% in 2019 before slightly declining to 18.2% in 2023, while female rates fluctuated, with lows of 10.8% and highs of 13.7%. Among grades, 11th graders had the highest obesity prevalence in 2023 at 17.3%, followed by ninth graders, whereas ninth and 12th graders had the lowest rates of overweight.

“In the U.S. today, adolescent obesity rates continue to rise while weight-loss attempts have steadily declined,” said Charles H. Hennekens, M.D., Dr.PH, FACPM, co-author and the First Sir Richard Doll Professor of Medicine and Preventive Medicine and senior academic advisor in FAU’s College of Medicine. “These findings highlight increasing clinical and public health challenges and illustrate the urgent need for targeted interventions.”

Taken together, the data depict a generation where higher body weights are becoming more common, even as motivation to manage weight – particularly among female adolescents – is declining. While female adolescents still report weight-loss attempts at higher rates than their male counterparts, these efforts have dropped compared with previous years. This decline is striking given that adolescent girls often experience greater body dissatisfaction and a desire to be thinner, pressures likely amplified by social comparisons on platforms like social media.

“While more research is needed, these data have implications for clinicians and public health practitioners,” said Hennekens. “These patterns underscore the need for clinical and public health strategies to address the challenges in U.S. adolescents to prevent future morbidity and mortality.”

The researchers emphasize school programs that boost nutrition knowledge, body image and mental health to help teens build lasting healthy habits. Public health policies should also target motivation, with initiatives like the CDC’s State Physical Activity and Nutrition program tailored to males’ higher obesity rates and females’ declining weight-loss efforts.

Study co-authors are Jack Yang, first author; Emily Krill and Cheila Llorens, FAU College of Medicine medical students; Alan Kunz-Lomelin, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Phyllis and Harvey Sandler School of Social Work within FAU’s College of Social Work and Criminal Justice; and Panagiota Kitsantas, Ph.D., professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at George Mason University, and former professor and chair of population health at FAU’s College of Medicine.

-FAU-

©