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10/28/2018 The places where too many are fat and too many are thin - BBC News

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Health

The places where too many are fat and too many are thin
By Dr Sophie Hawkesworth & Dr Lindsay Keir
Wellcome

23 October 2018

GETTY IMAGES

Obesity is often portrayed as a Western problem, with under-nutrition found in poorer


countries.

But the truth is more complex. Nine out of 10 countries are in the grip of a health epidemic
known as the "double burden" - where overweight and undernourished people live side-by-
side.

A worldwide explosion in the availability of unhealthy foods, a shift towards office jobs and the
growth of transport and television are among the many causes.

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Often, this double burden occurs not only within a community, but also within the same family.

It can even happen within the same person, who is overweight but lacking in vital nutrients.
Alternatively, they can be part of a phenomenon known as "thin-fat", where people appear to
be a healthy weight, but carry large amounts of hidden fat.

Obese children
Every country in the world is struggling with a nutrition problem of some kind.

The number of people suffering from chronic food deprivation reached an estimated 815m in
2016 - a 5% increase in two years. Much of the increase was in Africa, where 20% of people
were malnourished.

Meanwhile, obesity rates have tripled over the last 40 years. Globally, more than 600m
adults are obese, while 1.9bn are overweight.

The number of obese people in developing countries is catching up with the developed world.

The highest rates of childhood obesity can be found in Micronesia, the Middle East and the
Caribbean. And since 2000 the number of obese children in Africa has doubled.

In many places it is common to find children whose diet does not meet their needs.

In South Africa, almost one in three boys are overweight or obese, while a further third are
underweight.

In Brazil, 36% of girls are overweight or obese, while 16% are classed as underweight.

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Money to spend
Lifestyle changes are partly to blame for the double burden of obesity and under-nourishment.

Many low and middle-income countries, such as India and Brazil, have a new middle class
with disposable income, rather than just the money to spend on essentials.

Often, this has meant a move away from traditional foods towards more Western diets high in
sugars, fats and meat, and low in unrefined grains and beans.

In some countries this has also happened as people move from the countryside to the city,
where there is much more choice of food.

For example, a study of young children in China suggested that in the countryside, obesity
rates were 10%, while the malnutrition rate was 21%. In cities, 17% of children were obese
while 14% were malnourished.

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Although many people's diets may be higher in calories, they can still offer too few vitamins
and minerals.

Professor Ranjan Yajnik, a diabetes specialist in Pune, India, is seeing first-hand one impact
this change of diets is having.

"Diabetes was considered a disease of the older and more obese," he says. "But in India
we're seeing it in younger people and with a lower BMI."

Indians are eating fewer nutrient-rich foods and getting more calories from junk food, he says,
resulting in the problem of thin-fat - "people who are thin by most criteria are actually carrying
large amounts of hidden fat".

Hidden, or visceral fat, accumulates around internal organs, including the liver. High levels of
visceral fat may increase the risk of type 2 diabetes and heart disease, even if the carrier
doesn't look overweight.

Tackling hunger
Children are particularly vulnerable to unhealthy diets, as they need vitamins and minerals in
order to grow and develop normally.

Some households contain children who are undernourished, even as they eat the same diet
as their obese parents, because they are deficient in vitamins.

Research also suggests stunted or malnourished children are more likely to become
overweight later in life, as their metabolism slows and their body hangs on to fat reserves.

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This means countries need to be careful that policies aimed at tackling hunger do not
accidentally add to the problem of over-nutrition.

In Chile during the 1920s, a national programme was introduced to provide rations to
pregnant women and the under-sixes.

This reduced hunger but in the long-term is thought to have contributed to Chile's rapidly
rising rates of childhood obesity.

The West
While the double burden may be particularly prevalent in developing countries, the problem is
also found in richer nations.

In the UK, for example, more than a quarter of adults are obese, costing the NHS an
estimated £5.1bn each year.

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At the same time, 3.7m children live in households which cannot afford to follow healthy
dietary guidelines, with one in 10 living with severe food insecurity.

In the European Union, 14% of 15-19 year-olds are underweight, and a similar proportion
are overweight or obese. However, more than half of over-18s are overweight or obese,
while just 2% are underweight.

Choices
The causes of this double burden are complicated.

It is not only a question of having access to healthy foods, and no two people or cultures view
nutrition in the same way.

Our food choices are influenced by many things, some of which we may not be aware of.

They include cost, local availability, time pressures, healthily eating knowledge and the diets
of people around us.

And every person's nutritional needs are different. This partly depends upon their metabolism
and how good their health was to start off with.

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The cost to the individual and society of over and under-nutrition are numerous.

Children who grow up undernourished often do worse in school and earn less throughout their
life.

Childhood obesity is likely to lead to poorer health in adulthood, and increases the risk of
diseases like cancer later on.

Malnutrition is a particular risk for older people - making them twice as likely to visit their
doctor and at risk of longer hospital stays.

Making progress
In developing countries, problems like diabetes and heart disease are likely to soar in tandem
with obesity rates.

For health systems which have traditionally focused on infectious diseases such as malaria
and have small budgets, this will be a huge challenge.

What can be done? South America - where many countries suffer from the double burden - is
leading the way.

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GETTY IMAGES

Brazil was the first country to sign up to the UN's Decade of Action on Nutrition, making
many commitments. These include halting the growth in obesity, cutting consumption of
sugary drinks by 30% and increasing fruit and vegetable intake by 18%. It aims to achieve
these with policies such as microloans to farmers, reducing tax on certain fresh foods and
educating children on nutrition.

Mexico was the first country to implement a 'sugar tax', imposing a 10% levy on artificially
sweetened drinks in 2014.

This tax is predicted to reduce obesity rates by 12.5% in 12 years, and other countries such
as the UK are now adopting similar measures.

But much more is needed in order to halt this global nutrition crisis.

About this piece

This analysis piece was commissioned by the BBC from experts working for an outside
organisation.

Dr Sophie Hawkesworth works in the population health team at Wellcome and Dr Lindsay Keir
is in Wellcome's Clinical and Physiological Sciences Department. They spoke at the October
Wellcome/WHO conference "Transforming Nutrition Science for Better Health" with the
aim of generating new ideas and collaborations in global nutrition research.

Edited by Eleanor Lawrie

Related Topics

Expert Network Sugar tax Obesity Diabetes

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