| Literature DB >> 18534000 |
Abstract
The commercial drivers of the obesity epidemic are so influential that obesity can be considered a robust sign of commercial success - consumers are buying more food, more cars and more energy-saving machines. It is unlikely that these powerful economic forces will change sufficiently in response to consumer desires to eat less and move more or corporate desires to be more socially responsible. When the free market creates substantial population detriments and health inequalities, government policies are needed to change the ground rules in favour of population benefits.Concerted action is needed from governments in four broad areas: provide leadership to set the agenda and show the way; advocate for a multi-sector response and establish the mechanisms for all sectors to engage and enhance action; develop and implement policies (including laws and regulations) to create healthier food and activity environments, and; secure increased and continued funding to reduce obesogenic environments and promote healthy eating and physical activity.Policies, laws and regulations are often needed to drive the environmental and social changes that, eventually, will have a sustainable impact on reducing obesity. An 'obesity impact assessment' on legislation such as public liability, urban planning, transport, food safety, agriculture, and trade may identify 'rules' which contribute to obesogenic environments. In other areas, such as marketing to children, school food, and taxes/levies, there may be opportunities for regulations to actively support obesity prevention. Legislation in other areas such as to reduce climate change may also contribute to obesity prevention ('stealth interventions'). A political willingness to use policy instruments to drive change will probably be an early hallmark of successful obesity prevention.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18534000 PMCID: PMC2440375 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8462-5-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust New Zealand Health Policy ISSN: 1743-8462
Roles of government in obesity prevention
| ∘ Providing a visible lead | ∘ All societal change needs strong leadership | ∘ Being visible in the media | |
| ∘ Advocating for a multi-sector response across all societal sectors (governments, the private sector, civil society, and the public) | ∘ Solutions will need to involve many sectors within governments and all sectors outside government | ∘ Advocating to the private sector for corporate responsibility around marketing to children | |
| ∘ Securing increased and continuing funding to create healthy environments and encourage healthy eating and physical activity | ∘ Changing environments requires funding | ∘ Establishing a health promotion foundation (eg using an hypothecated tobacco tax) to fund programs and research | |
| ∘ Developing, implementing, and monitoring a set of policies, regulations, taxes, and subsidies that make environments less obesogenic and more health promoting | ∘ Most behaviours are heavily influenced by environmental factors (physical, economic, policy, socio-cultural) | ∘ Banning the marketing of unhealthy foods to children |