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Structural responses to the obesity epidemic in Latin America: what are the next steps for food and physical activity policies? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity in Latin America is rising rapidly, making it a significant public health issue, prompting countries to implement policies for better diet and exercise.
  • Recent studies show that market-based interventions like food taxes and marketing restrictions reduce unhealthy food consumption, while programs providing healthy foods help lower obesity rates.
  • Despite these efforts improving some health behaviors, obesity rates continue to climb, highlighting the need for ongoing strategies within a structural framework to combat the epidemic.

Article Abstract

Obesity is among the most complex public health challenges, particularly in Latin America, where obesity rates have increased faster than in any other region. Many countries have proposed or enacted comprehensive policies to promote adequate diet and physical activity under a structural framework. We summarize articles discussing the scope and impact of recently implemented obesity-related interventions in the light of a structural response framework. Overall, we find that: (1) market-based food interventions, including taxes on food, nutrition labelling, and marketing restrictions, decrease the consumption of targeted foods, (2) programs directly providing healthy foods are effective in reducing obesity, and (3) the construction of public areas for recreation increases the average frequency of physical activity. Although obesity-related interventions in the region have somewhat improved health behaviours, obesity prevalence remains on an upward trend. We discuss some opportunities to continue tackling the obesity epidemic in LATAM under a structural framework.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10122054PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2023.100486DOI Listing

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