News

Global Change Needed to Stem Obesity Pandemic


 

FROM THE LANCET

With all this new data and improved understanding of what causes obesity and its health care burden and costs, the lead author of the fourth and final article (Lancet 2011;378;838-47) in the series said that it’s time for governments and policy makers to act.

"Governments certainly need to lead obesity prevention, but so far few have shown any leadership whatsoever," commented Steven L. Gortmaker, Ph.D., of the department of society, human development, and health at Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

Dr. Gortmaker and his colleagues noted that the U.N. meeting on noncommunicable diseases "is an important opportunity for the international community to provide the leadership, global standards, and cross-agency structures needed to create a global food system that offers a healthy and secure food supply for all."

The research was conducted under the auspices of the Collaborative Obesity Modeling Network as part of the Envision Project and supported by the National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research, a collaboration of the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The NIH and the NIDDK provided additional funding.

All authors declared that they had no conflicts of interest.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Study Predicts Growing Demand for Diabetes Educators
MDedge Internal Medicine
ACCORD Mined for Clues About Cardiovascular Deaths
MDedge Internal Medicine
Scores Help Predict Benefit From Intensive Diabetes Therapy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Always Test for Other Causes of Osteoporosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Self-Monitoring Improves Glucose Control in Type 2 Diabetes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Avoid Thiazolidinediones to Preserve Bone in Diabetic Patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Vertebroplasty 'Benefits' May Be Placebo Effect
MDedge Internal Medicine
Three Promising Osteoporosis Treatments Studied
MDedge Internal Medicine
Primary Care Outpatient Protocol Reduces Acute Hyperglycemia
MDedge Internal Medicine
Chronic Disease: Hospitalization May Cause Medication Stoppage
MDedge Internal Medicine