Double‐ and triple‐duty actions in childhood for addressing the global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate change: A scoping review

Author:

Venegas Hargous Carolina12ORCID,Strugnell Claudia1ORCID,Allender Steven1ORCID,Orellana Liliana3ORCID,Corvalan Camila4ORCID,Bell Colin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Global Centre for Preventative Health and Nutrition (GLOBE), Institute for Health Transformation, Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

2. School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

3. Biostatistics Unit, Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

4. Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology (INTA) University of Chile Santiago Chile

Abstract

SummaryObesity, undernutrition, and climate change constitute a global syndemic that disproportionately affects vulnerable populations, including children. Double‐ and triple‐duty actions that simultaneously address these pandemics are needed to prevent further health, economic, and environmental consequences. Evidence describing the implementation and evaluation of such actions is lacking. This review summarized the literature on whole‐of‐population actions targeting children that were designed or adapted to be double or triple duty. Six academic databases were searched (January 2015–March 2021) using terms related to ‘children’, ‘intervention’, ‘nutrition’, ‘physical activity’, and ‘climate change’. Data were extracted from 43/15,475 studies, including six randomized controlled trials. Most (58%) described triple‐duty actions targeting food systems in schools such as implementing guidelines for healthier and environmentally sustainable school meals programs, and 51% reported engaging community in the design, implementation, and/or evaluation of actions. Changes in dietary intake, diet composition, greenhouse gas emissions, and food waste were the most frequently reported outcomes and 21 studies (three randomized controlled trials) showed positive double‐ or triple‐duty effects. This review is the first to demonstrate that double‐ and triple‐duty actions for addressing the global syndemic in childhood have been implemented and can have a positive impact on obesity, undernutrition, and climate change.

Funder

Deakin University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference77 articles.

1. World Health Organization.Malnutrition fact sheet. WHO2020.

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