Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Brazil confronted with growing obesity problem

Pulled from dire poverty, many now face a new issue

- By Dom Phillips

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil has been bogged down in a recession for over two years, but one business is still growing.

Fast food. And as it expands, so does the country’s obesity problem.

Brazil’s government won worldwide plaudits for bringing 36 million people out of poverty during 13 years of rule by the leftist Workers’ Party, which ended in August. As the economy boomed and consumer spending followed, some even joined a lower middle class which by 2014 had swelled to almost 60 percent of the population.

But the progress came at an unexpected cost: an explosion in the number of overweight people, who now account for 57 percent of Brazil’s population — with 1 in 5 obese.

Doctors, nutritioni­sts and other specialist­s say the weight gain is pronounced among Brazilians with low earnings — many of whom swapped precarious lives where food was often scarce for better incomes and cheap, abundant junk food and processed food.

“These are people who spend a lot of time at work or on transport. They do not have money or conditions to do physical activity,” said Joao Regis, an endocrinol­ogist at Rio’s Clementino Fraga Filho hospital, part of its federal university. “They are not educated about obesity.”

The rise in weight problems creates a huge burden for Brazil’s stretched public health system, which is grappling with escalating levels of diabetes, hypertensi­on and heart disease.

Rising obesity is a global phenomenon — one increasing­ly affecting developing countries in Latin America and Caribbean.

The percentage of overweight Brazilians was already rising when Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva became president in 2003, ushering in an era of prosperity. Since then it has kept climbing for men and rocketed more than 40 percent for women. The nonprofit GRACO sponsors an exercise class for obese people in Rio de Janeiro last month. One in five people in Brazil are considered obese. One in 3 children are overweight.

In 1975, Brazil had the world’s ninth largest population of underweigh­t men. By 2014, it was ranked third globally for obese men, after China and the United States, according to a study in the Lancet, a British medical journal. Nearly 1 in 4 women are obese.

Rio bar owner Veronica Cabral, 28, weighs 368 pounds, and her 8-year-old daughter, Debora, is classified as “seriously obese.” Cabral grew up in a “very poor” family in Recife in Brazil’s northeast. But, she said, “We lived by the beach, we fished, we had a garden and vegetables and fruit in the yard.”

When she was 13, her mother moved her and her four siblings to Rio. Two years later Lula came to power, and the lives of millions of Brazilians like Veronica began to improve. As Brazil’s economy roared thanks to rising commoditie­s prices, a new, lowermiddl­e class was born and encouraged to spend with easy credit. Many Brazilians benefited from a welfare scheme for low-income women who agreed to send their children to school and get them vaccinated.

“Life started to get better,” Cabral said.

Everybody in her family got jobs. For Brazilians like her who had grown up with little money, grabbing fast food and a soda at McDonald’s or a Brazilian burger chain like Bob’s was desirable and affordable.

“Everything we could not do in childhood we did as adults,” she said. “Eat what you want. You go to the mall, you go to McDonald’s, you go to Bob’s.”

Even as the recession bit, the number of fast-food restaurant­s rose 11 percent in 2015. While Brazilians’ incomes might have been dropping, they clung to their habits.

Cabral weighed 483 pounds when she first sought help at Rio’s nonprofit Group for the Rescue of Self-Esteem and Citizenshi­p of the Obese or GRACO, in its Portuguese acronym. The group was founded in 2002 and offers free low-fat lunches, nutrition advice and physical education to about 200 people a month.

“Most of the time, these are people from low incomes,” said Rosimere da Silva, the founder.

Michele Lessa, general coordinato­r of nutrition at Brazil’s Ministry of Health, said the rise in obesity is because of growing consumptio­n of junk food and processed food, an increasing­ly sedentary lifestyle, and the rising popularity of eating out.

The government has launched campaigns encouragin­g a healthier diet, financed exercise spaces in Brazilian towns, and encouraged more nutritious meals in school cafeterias. Recent figures suggest the growth of obesity may have slowed, Lessa said.

Cintia Cercato, an endocrinol­ogist and president of the Brazilian Associatio­n for the Study of Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome, cited Brazilians’ move to urban areas — 86 percent live in cities — as a factor in the rise in obesity.

Many residents spend hours commuting to and from work on public transport, leaving less time for cooking or exercise.

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