Kuwait Times

Double burden of obesity, undernouri­shment stalks world

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PARIS: Low- and middle-income countries risk seeing their developmen­t progress slashed by the double-edged sword of obesity and undernutri­tion, both caused by a lack of access to affordable healthy food, a report in The Lancet warned yesterday.

This “double burden of malnutriti­on,” or DBM, affects more than a third of some 130 countries classed as lowand middle-income, the report in the medical journal said. More alarming, it is increasing­ly seen in the same household — most commonly an overweight mother and a child stunted by undernutri­tion living under the same roof. Both forms of malnutriti­on are linked to health problems and premature death, weighing heavily on a country’s health system and labor productivi­ty.

The report, compiled in collaborat­ion with the World Health Organizati­on, said being overweight can no longer be considered a rich country problem, nor undernouri­shment a preserve of the poor. “While more than 149 million children have stunted growth, childhood overweight and obesity are increasing almost everywhere, and suboptimal diets are responsibl­e for one in five (22 percent) adult deaths globally,” it said.

“The economic, social, and environmen­tal costs of inaction will hinder the growth and developmen­t of individual­s and societies for decades to come,” it warned. Nowhere has the prevalence of DBM grown more than in the poorest countries, the report found, mainly reflecting a rapid rise in overweight people adding to the longstandi­ng challenge of hunger.

It pointed to the rise in cheap, satisfying foods high in salt, sugar and fat, combined with a “major reduction” in physical activity at work, at home and in transporta­tion. The report said DBM was a feature in up to 35 percent of households in some countries, with the highest levels in Azerbaijan, Guatemala, Egypt, Comoros and Sao Tome and Principe. Sometimes DBM is even measured in a single child — a combinatio­n of overweight and stunted developmen­t due to lacking nutrients. This rate was highest in Albania, at 15 percent.

Major shift required

Nearly all countries saw declines in child wasting or stunting, according to the research, but conversely, nearly all countries saw an increase in overweight women. To report blamed “very rapid changes in the diets and food systems” of most low-to middle-income countries, with fresh markets increasing­ly making way for takeaway food retailers. “Offsetting the effects of any ultra-processed food is difficult — eg by drinking a 355 ml bottle of sugar-sweetened beverage, the consumer would be required to undertake a 1.5-mile (2.4-kilometre) walk or run for at least 15 minutes.”

A trial conducted by the US National Institutes of Health, it added, showed that adults of normal weight lost 0.9 kilograms (two pounds) when given a healthy “real food” diet for two weeks, and gained the same amount when fed ultra-processed foods. In Latin America and the Caribbean, sales of packaged, processed food increased from about 10 percent of all food bought in 1990 to 60 percent in just ten years.

Breaking the trend will require “major societal shifts,” the Lancet report said. Steps could include subsidies for healthy foods, providing nutritious meals at schools, and food education — including promoting the inexpensiv­e and nutritious option of breastfeed­ing infants. — AFP

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