Adults in the US are more likely to be obese, with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, although Britons are more likely to smoke.
British adults in their 30s and 40s are healthier than their counterparts in the US – but are more likely to think their health is poor, a study has suggested.
The health of the US “acts as a warning” of what Britain could be like without the “safety net” of the NHS, researchers said, with differences potentially down to access to healthcare, diet and levels of poverty.
For the study, academics from the UCL Centre for Longitudinal Studies, University of Oxford, Syracuse University and University of North Carolina used data from the 1970 British Cohort Study and the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health.
Analysis included 9,665 British people born in 1970 and 5,381 US adults.
It found adults in the US were more likely to have high cholesterol and high blood blood pressure, while four in 10 US adults were obese compared to 34.5% of Brits.
However, 18% of British adults were likely to report their health as poor compared to 12% of adults in the US.
Britons were also more likely to smoke every day, with 28% reporting cigarette use compared to 21% in the US cohort.
Alternative headline: Brits not quite as fat as Yanks, and slightly less deluded about it
The numbers don't make for great reading for either side of the Pond and there's a lot of things we, as individuals, can do to help ourselves and free up NHS resources for those that can't.
Is it that Britons are more likely to doubt their health, or is it that Americans are pathologically afraid to be sick because it can bankrupt them, so they tend to overestimate their health in order to not have to go to the doctor.