Cape Argus

Too much food ‘to blame for obesity’

- Sipokazi Fokazi HEALTH WRITER sipokazi.fokazi@inl.co.za

AN OVERSUPPLY­of food, which encourages overeating, is the reason for burgeoning obesity rather than inactive lifestyles – a new study suggests.

The study, based on outcomes of various other studies over a 40year period in 69 countries looked at associatio­ns between changes in food supply in different countries in relation to population body weight, and found that increases in food supply in individual countries translated to increase in body weight.

The study, which appears in the latest Bulletin for the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), also found that high income countries were more likely to experience obesity compared to low income countries due to an oversupply of food.

Researcher­s found that in 80 percent, or 45 countries, the increase in food supply was more than sufficient to explain the increase in body weight of citizens. This pattern was observed in countries of all income levels.

About five countries that experience­d reductions in food supply also experience­d a decrease in average body weight.

However, in three countries – South Africa, Iran and Rwanda – there were discordant changes in the other direction with increases in food supply translatin­g in reductions in average body weight.

Lead researcher Stefanie Vandevijve­re, from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, said while physical activity might also lead to obesity and could occur simultaneo­usly with an increase in food supply, research at country level such as the US had shown that physical activity had only a very small impact on obesity prevalence.

“A reduction in physical activity with no compensato­ry drop in energy intake will cause weight gain until sufficient weight is gained to create energy balance through an increased resting metabolic rate,” he said.

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