Childhood Obesity in Developing Countries: Epidemiology, Determinants, and Prevention

Author:

Gupta Nidhi123,Goel Kashish345,Shah Priyali6,Misra Anoop376

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics (N.G.), Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit, Michigan, 48201;

2. Endocrine Research Unit (N.G.) Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota, 55905;

3. Diabetes Foundation (India) (N.G., K.G., P.S., A.M.) New Delhi 110016, India;

4. Department of Internal Medicine (K.G.), Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, 48202;

5. Division of Cardiovascular Diseases (K.G.), Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota, 55905;

6. National Diabetes, Obesity, and Cholesterol Disorders Foundation (N-DOC) (P.S., A.M.), New Delhi 110016, India;

7. Fortis C-DOC Centre of Excellence in Diabetes, Metabolic Diseases and Endocrinology (A.M.), Fortis Hospital, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi 110070, India

Abstract

Rapidly changing dietary practices and a sedentary lifestyle have led to increasing prevalence of childhood obesity (5–19 yr) in developing countries recently: 41.8% in Mexico, 22.1% in Brazil, 22.0% in India, and 19.3% in Argentina. Moreover, secular trends indicate increasing prevalence rates in these countries: 4.1 to 13.9% in Brazil during 1974–1997, 12.2 to 15.6% in Thailand during 1991–1993, and 9.8 to 11.7% in India during 2006–2009. Important determinants of childhood obesity include high socioeconomic status, residence in metropolitan cities, female gender, unawareness and false beliefs about nutrition, marketing by transnational food companies, increasing academic stress, and poor facilities for physical activity. Childhood obesity has been associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus, the early-onset metabolic syndrome, subclinical inflammation, dyslipidemia, coronary artery diseases, and adulthood obesity. Therapeutic lifestyle changes and maintenance of regular physical activity through parental initiative and social support interventions are the most important strategies in managing childhood obesity. Also, high-risk screening and effective health educational programs are urgently needed in developing countries.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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