Overweight and obesity affect over 2 billion people worldwide, causing at least 2.8 million deaths annually. An estimate of the economic cost is 2.8% of global GDP. Since the 1970s the prevalence of excess weight has more than tripled across populations around the world to 13 %, but among children the proportion has reached 18% (over 30% in the United States). There is variation in this but projections continue to show an upward trend in most countries, with persistent and deep disparities and profound consequences for physical and mental health. Given the complexities involved in this phenomenon, what can be done about it?
Over the past decade, our collective understanding of the systems, forces, and conditions that impact childhood obesity has evolved. Increasingly, initiatives in this area have focused on policy and environmental changes. In many parts of the world, we have moved forward as we have shifted national conversations and public discourse away from just personal responsibility to an understanding that it is also the systems and policies that shape our ability to live well and access opportunities for healthy eating and physical activity.
There is increasing recognition that the systems and policies that drive obesity in childhood are the same systems that broadly impact the health and well-being of children and families. What this means is that we are unlikely to solve the childhood obesity crisis unless we are widening our lens to think about broad changes, such as policies that better support families. Until we address the broader determinants of obesity and barriers to its treatment in low income and minority populations, the current disparities in the prevalence of obesity and other chronic diseases will persist and may even increase. The epidemic of childhood obesity is deeply intertwined with related challenges around food access, income inequality, a fragile safety net, inadequate public transportation, and the scarcity of affordable housing. One of the most pressing challenges for preventing and controlling the global epidemic is to ensure that the public health interventions that are being deployed are reaching and benefitting the most socially disadvantaged populations.
This Salzburg Global program will highlight how global innovations and ideas in the childhood obesity prevention space could help optimize health outcomes for children everywhere. Building on Salzburg Global’s long-standing series on health systems transformation, including last year’s seminar on creating healthy environments and shared value for children, and on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s approach to a Culture of Health, this program will enable participants from across the world to review strategies and consider adaption in different contexts to enable all children to grow up at a healthy weight.
The program can be downloaded here.
The general information can be downloaded here.
Newsletters from the program can be downloaded here.
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Kannter, Rebecca, and others. Anticipatory effects of the implementation of the Chilean Law of Food Labeling and Advertising on food and beverage product reformulation, ObesityReviews, 27 June, 2019.
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Perez-Escamilla, Rafael, and others. Dietary guidelines for children under 2 years of age in the context of nurturing care, Wiley Online Libray, 25 June, 2019.
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Perez-Escamilla, Rafael. Nutrition Disparities and the Global Burden of Malnutrition, BMJ, 13 June, 2018.
Perez-Escamilla, Rafael, and others. Prevention of childhood obesity and food policies in Latin America: from research to practice, ObesityReviews, 25 July, 2017.
Reyes, Marcela, and others. Development of the Chilean front-of-package food warning label, BMC Public Health, 2019.
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Whitaker, Robert C. The Childhood Obesity Epidemic: Lessons for Preventing Socially Determined Health Conditions, US National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
This five-day highly-interactive session, held at Schloss Leopoldskron, home of Salzburg Global Seminar, will prioritize opportunities for cross-border sharing and learning. Participants will focus on building new insights and aggregating perspectives and experiences from relevant sectors, areas of expertise and regions. Working groups, each with a thematic and/or country focus, will prepare recommendations for action by diffrent target audiences.
Salzburg Global Seminar’s Health and Health Care Innovation sessions seek to bring together cross-sector and crossgenerational change-makers to tackle complex challenges. This program will bring together 60 innovators and stakeholders from around the world who have engaged families, communities and policymakers in integrated approaches to tackle the obesity epidemic. The group will span perspectives from community and civil society organizations; nutrition, education, psychology and behavioral science; urban planning and physical activity; local and national government; business and the media; and philanthropy.