| Literature DB >> 26512717 |
Abstract
In the current global economy, chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have become the leading cause of death and a major health concern for both developed and developing countries. Among other factors, the worldwide spread of NCDs is driven by the globalisation of unhealthy habits. The purpose of this paper is to develop a simple statistic to measure, at the national level, the average population's exposure to the main NCDs modifiable risk factors. The approach and methodology followed by the United Nations Development Programme to compute the Human Development Index (HDI) is applied to four basic indicators of NCD-related preventable risk factors (alcohol consumption, excess caloric intake, non-balanced diet and tobacco use) in 112 countries worldwide in 2012-14. We obtain a summary composite index, which we call the Unhealthy Behaviour Index (UBI), which ranks countries by the average level of the unhealthy habits (drinking, eating and smoking) of their populations. We find that Belarus and Russian federation are the two countries with the unhealthiest NCD-related lifestyle. With the exception of Canada, the first twenty populations more exposed to the main NCDs preventable risk factors all live in European countries, and mainly in countries of Eastern Europe. Overall, the UBI tends to increase along with the level of human development. In medium, high and very high HDI countries, however, the same level of human development may be associated with very different kinds of NCD-related lifestyles. Finally, economic growth may push populations toward either more unhealthy or healthy habits, depending on the countries' level of development; the elasticity of unhealthy habits with respect to income per capita is positive (but less than one: on average 0.6) until $30,000, decreases as income rises, and becomes negative (around -0.3) in very high income countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26512717 PMCID: PMC4626075 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0141834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The Unhealthy Behaviour Index (UBI): Graphical presentation.
Variables and goalposts for the Unhealthy Behaviour Index.
| Variable | Code | Description | Source | Obs. max. | Min. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol consumption |
| Per capita consumption of pure alcohol (litres/person 15+/year) | WHO (2014) | 17.8 (Belarus, 2012) | 0 |
| Excess caloric intake |
| Actual—Recommended caloric intake ECI = DES—ADER (kcal/person/day) | FAO (2014) | 1,349.5 (Turkey, 2012–2014) | 0 |
| Non-balanced diet |
| Actual—Recommended fat and protein intake NBD = AFPS—RFPI (g/person/day) | FAO (2014) and FAO/WHO (2003) | 145.1 (Israel, 2012–2014) | 0 |
| Tobacco use |
| Per capita cigarettes consumption (number/person/year) | Ng et al. (2012) | 3,385 (Cyprus, 2012) | 0 |
a15+ = person aged 15 or older.
b2012–2014 = three years average.
cDES = Dietary Energy Supply; ADER = Average Dietary Energy Requirement.
dAFPS = Average fat and protein supply; RFPI = Recommended fat and protein intake.
Calculating the Unhealthy Behaviour Index (example: United Kingdom).
| Variable | Code | United Kingdom | Max | Min | Subindices | Dimension index | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol consumption |
| 11.4 | 17.8 | 0 |
|
| |
| Excess caloric intake |
| 922.3 | 1,349.5 | 0 |
| 0.683 | |
| Non balanced diet |
| 106.8 | 145.1 | 0 |
| 0.736 | |
| gm ( | 0.709 | ||||||
|
|
| ||||||
| Tobacco consumption |
| 998.0 | 3,385 | 0 |
|
| |
|
|
| ||||||
agm (ECIX, NBDX) = geometric mean of ECIX and NBDX.
Ranking of the first ten countries by UBI and dimension indices.
| Country |
| Country |
| Country |
| Country |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Belarus | 0.773 | Belarus | 1.000 | Israel | 1.000 | Cyprus | 1.000 |
|
| Russian Fed. | 0.694 | Lithuania | 0.949 | Austria | 0.954 | Malta | 0.961 |
|
| Greece | 0.687 | Moldova | 0.904 | United States | 0.919 | Belarus | 0.856 |
|
| Czech Rep. | 0.668 | Russian Fed. | 0.831 | Belgium | 0.917 | Russian Fed. | 0.838 |
|
| Ireland | 0.651 | Czech Rep. | 0.787 | France | 0.874 | Croatia | 0.819 |
|
| Montenegro | 0.647 | Ukraine | 0.787 | Canada | 0.837 | Moldova | 0.816 |
|
| Austria | 0.644 | Romania | 0.742 | Luxembourg | 0.827 | Lebanon | 0.804 |
|
| France | 0.634 | Croatia | 0.730 | Montenegro | 0.822 | Greece | 0.803 |
|
| Romania | 0.633 | Slovakia | 0.702 | Italy | 0.821 | St. Vincent | 0.795 |
|
| Croatia | 0.630 | Hungary | 0.697 | Ireland | 0.800 | Bosnia-Herz. | 0.788 |
|
| Lithuania | 0.626 | France | 0.691 | Greece | 0.780 | Macedonia | 0.748 |
|
| Malta | 0.624 | Serbia | 0.691 | Norway | 0.776 | Slovakia | 0.716 |
|
| Luxembourg | 0.615 | Portugal | 0.685 | Iceland | 0.775 | Montenegro | 0.673 |
|
| Belgium | 0.606 | Latvia | 0.674 | Turkey | 0.772 | Serbia | 0.672 |
|
| Switzerland | 0.599 | Australia | 0.669 | Germany | 0.751 | Armenia | 0.664 |
|
| Canada | 0.590 | Luxembourg | 0.669 | Portugal | 0.746 | Estonia | 0.661 |
|
| Poland | 0.589 | Finland | 0.657 | Switzerland | 0.738 | Korea Rep. | 0.646 |
|
| Latvia | 0.584 | Poland | 0.652 | United Kingdom | 0.734 | Czech Rep. | 0.625 |
|
| Slovenia | 0.579 | Germany | 0.646 | Australia | 0.702 | Uruguay | 0.610 |
|
| Kazakhstan | 0.574 | United Kingdom | 0.640 | Lithuania | 0.695 | Ireland | 0.608 |
a Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Fig 2The Unhealthy Behaviour Index and the Human Development Index.
Unhealthy Behaviour Index and components by income groups.
| Income groups |
| η |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High (GNI pc | 0.488 | -0.29 | 8.5 | 879.7 | 96.9 | 1,487 | 26 |
| Upper middle (GNI pc 15.001–30.000) | 0.476 | 0.52 | 9.3 | 720.3 | 58.1 | 1,833 | 33 |
| Lower middle (GNI pc 5.001–15.000) | 0.292 | 0.66 | 6.4 | 564.1 | 27.7 | 1,286 | 37 |
| Low (GNI pc < or = 5.000) | 0.153 | 0.71 | 2.9 | 483.1 | 20.3 | 742 | 16 |
aη = income elasticity of the UBI
b n = number of countries of the sample in the income groups.
c GNI pc = Gross National Income per capita 2013 (2011, PPP $) (UNDP, 2014), PPP is purchasing power parity.
Fig 3Indifference curves for u and h.
Fig 4The income consumption curve for u and h.