The Star Malaysia

More than a billion obese

This psychologi­cal figure was only expected to be reached in 2030, but arrived eight years earlier.

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MORE than one billion people around the world are now suffering from obesity, with the number having more than quadrupled since 1990, according to a study released by The Lancet medical journal.

The “epidemic” is particular­ly hitting poorer countries and the rate is growing among children and adolescent­s faster than adults, according to the study carried out with the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

The study, released on Monday, estimated that there were about 226 million obese adults, adolescent­s and children in the world in 1990.

The figure had risen to 1,038 million in 2022.

WHO Nutrition and Food Safety Department director Dr Francesco Branca said the rise past one billion people has come “much earlier than we have anticipate­d”.

While doctors knew obesity numbers were rising fast, the symbolic figure had previously been expected in 2030.

Researcher­s analysed the weight and height measuremen­ts of more than 220 million people in more than 190 countries to reach the estimates, according to The Lancet.

They estimated that 504 million adult women and 374 million men were obese in 2022.

The study said the obesity rate had nearly tripled for men (14%) since 1990 and more than doubled for women (18.5%).

Some 159 million children and adolescent­s were living with obesity in 2022, according to the study, up from about 31 million in 1990.

The chronic and complex illness is accompanie­d by a greater risk of death from heart disease, diabetes and certain cancers.

Being overweight increased the risk of death during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Countries in Polynesia and Micronesia, the Caribbean, the Middle East and North Africa have suffered more from the rise.

“These countries now have higher obesity rates than many high-income industrial­ised countries, especially those in Europe,” the study said.

“In the past we have tended to think of obesity as a problem of the rich, now a problem of the world,” said Dr Branca, who highlighte­d the fast lifestyle changes in low and middle-income countries.

The “very rapid transforma­tion of the food systems is not for the better”.

Study lead author and the United Kingdom’s Imperial College London Global Environmen­t Health chair Professor Dr Majid Ezzati said that there were signs that obesity was levelling out in some southern European countries such as France and Spain, “especially for women”.

But he said that in most countries, there are more people suffering from obesity than being underweigh­t, which the study said had fallen since 1990.

While not eating enough is the main cause of being underweigh­t, eating badly is a prime factor for obesity.

“This new study highlights the importance of preventing and managing obesity from early life to adulthood, through diet, physical activity and adequate care, as needed,” said WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

He added that “getting back on track” to meet global targets for cutting obesity rates “requires the cooperatio­n of the private sector, which must be accountabl­e for the health impacts of their products”.

The WHO has supported taxes on sugary drinks, limiting the marketing of unhealthy foods to children, and increasing subsidies for healthy foods.

Experts say that new treatments against diabetes can also help combat obesity.

Dr Branca said the new drugs “are an important tool, but not a solution of the problem”.

“Obesity is a long-term issue and it is important to look at the impact of these drugs on longterm effects or side effects,” he added. –

 ?? — Filepic ?? rapid lifestyle changes in low- and middle-income countries have fuelled the obesity epidemic.
— Filepic rapid lifestyle changes in low- and middle-income countries have fuelled the obesity epidemic.

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