Khaleej Times

Obesity bomb ticking

- AFP

Paris — The world had 10 times as many obese children and teenagers last year than in 1975, but underweigh­t kids still outnumbere­d them, a study said on Wednesday.

Warning of a “double burden” of malnutriti­on, researcher­s said the rate of increase in obesity far outstrippe­d the decline in under-nutrition.

“If post-2000 trends continue, child and adolescent obesity is expected to surpass moderate and severe underweigh­t by 2022,” researcher­s wrote in The Lancet medical journal. The team found that there were 74 million obese boys aged 5-19 in 2016, up from six million four decades earlier. For girls, the tally swelled from five million to 50 million. There were 117 million underweigh­t boys and 75 million underweigh­t girls last year after the number peaked around the year 2000 . Almost two thirds of the underweigh­t children lived in south Asia.

Obesity ballooned in every region in the world, while the number of underweigh­t children decreased everywhere except south and southeast Asia.

paris — The world had 10 times as many obese children and teenagers last year than in 1975, but underweigh­t kids still outnumbere­d them, a study said Wednesday.

Warning of a “double burden” of malnutriti­on, researcher­s said the rate of increase in obesity far outstrippe­d the decline in undernutri­tion.

“If post-2000 trends continue, child and adolescent obesity is expected to surpass moderate and severe underweigh­t by 2022,” researcher­s wrote in The Lancet medical journal.

The team found that there were 74 million obese boys aged 5-19 in 2016, up from six million four decades earlier.

For girls, the tally swelled from five million to 50 million.

By comparison, there were 117 million underweigh­t boys and 75 million underweigh­t girls last year after the number peaked around the year 2000, the study said.

Almost two thirds of the underweigh­t children lived in south Asia.

Obesity ballooned in every region in the world, while the number of underweigh­t children slowly decreased everywhere except south and southeast Asia, and central, east and west Africa.

The prevalence of underweigh­t children decreased from 9.2 per cent to 8.4 per cent of girls aged 5-19 over the study period, and from 14.8 per cent to 12.4 per cent in boys.

Obesity grew from 0.7 per cent to 5.6 per cent among girls and from 0.9 per cent to 7.8 per cent in boys.

In Nauru, the Cook Islands and Palau, more than 30 per cent of children and teenagers were obese in 2016.

In some countries in Polynesia and Micronesia, the Middle East, North Africa, the Caribbean and the United States, more than one in five children were obese.

Experts divide people into body mass categories calculated on the basis of their weight-to-height ratio. These range from underweigh­t, normal weight, overweight and three categories of obese.

Obesity comes with the risk of chronic diseases such as diabetes,

unaffordab­ility of healthy food options to the poor can lead to social inequaliti­es in obesity, and limit how much we can reduce its burden Majid Ezzati, study author

while underweigh­t children are more at risk from infectious diseases.

Children in either category can be stunted if their diet does not include healthy nutrients.

“There is a continued need for policies that enhance food security in low-income countries and households, especially in south Asia,” said study author Majid Ezzati from Imperial College London.

“But our data also shows that the transition from underweigh­t to overweight and obesity can happen quickly in an unhealthy nutritiona­l transition with an increase in nutrient-poor, energy-dense foods.”

The team used the height and weight data of 129 million people older than five to estimate body mass trends for 200 countries from 1975 to 2016.

While obesity in children and teens appears to have plateaued in rich countries, its rise continued in low- and middle-income countries, they found.

“Very few policies and programmes attempt to make healthy foods such as whole grains and fresh fruits and vegetables affordable to poor families,” Ezzati said in a statement.

“Unaffordab­ility of healthy food options to the poor can lead to social inequaliti­es in obesity, and limit how much we can reduce its burden.” —

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