| Literature DB >> 28065195 |
Lindsay M Jaacks1, Justine Kavle2, Abigail Perry3, Albertha Nyaku4.
Abstract
The goals of the present targeted review on maternal and child overweight and obesity were to: (i) understand the current situation in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) with regard to recent trends and context-specific risk factors; and (ii) building off this, identify entry points for leveraging existing undernutrition programmes to address overweight and obesity in LMIC. Trends reveal that overweight and obesity are a growing problem among women and children in LMIC; as in Ghana, Kenya, Niger, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, where the prevalence among urban women is approaching 50 %. Four promising entry points were identified: (i) the integration of overweight and obesity into national nutrition plans; (ii) food systems (integration of food and beverage marketing regulations into existing polices on the marketing of breast-milk substitutes and adoption of policies to promote healthy diets); (iii) education systems (integration of nutrition into school curricula with provision of high-quality foods through school feeding programmes); and (iv) health systems (counselling and social and behaviour change communication to improve maternal diet, appropriate gestational weight gain, and optimal infant and young child feeding practices). We conclude by presenting a step-by-step guide for programme officers and policy makers in LMIC with actionable objectives to address overweight and obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Developing countries; Dual burden; Overweight; Programme implementation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28065195 PMCID: PMC5468800 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980016003323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Fig. 1Framework illustrating how specific actions can help to achieve meaningful improvements in outcomes such as increased uptake of optimal nutrition and health practices, and how they impact overweight and obesity and other forms of malnutrition
Examples of programmatic approaches to address overweight and obesity in low- and middle-income countries in the context of existing nutrition programmes largely focused on undernutrition
| Food systems | Education systems | Health systems | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Existing nutrition programmes |
Restrict marketing of breast-milk substitutes Invest in food distribution infrastructure Increased access to legumes/pulses and grains high in protein and micronutrients Public procurement and distribution of fruits and vegetables |
Schools should develop dietary guidelines that promote and provide healthy foods and, where feasible, provide healthy breakfast and/or lunch to students |
Counselling by community health workers on appropriate dietary intake during pregnancy Breast-feeding promotion Appropriate complementary feeding that emphasizes quantity, quality and diversity of foods according to age, and ensures intra-household allocation of foods to infants and young children |
| Integration of overweight and obesity |
Restrict marketing of unhealthy foods to children Food-based dietary guidelines Nutrition label standards |
School curricula should include what constitutes a ‘healthy diet’, the health consequences of overweight/obesity and the importance of physical activity Adolescent girls are an important target population Schools should reduce access to sugary, high-fat snacks and beverages The importance of a healthy weight should also be discussed in preparation for pregnancy, with non-pregnant women and adolescents, through community channels or schools |
Develop overweight and obesity polices and guidelines and provide budgetary allocations for implementation at district and health facility levels Integrate overweight into pre-service and in-service training curricula of health providers Incorporate promotion of ‘healthy diets’ in nutrition behaviour change activities Heath-care providers should provide counselling on maternal diet and appropriate gestational weight gain during antenatal care Counselling should be based on an understanding of cultural beliefs and food choice related to high-energy foods (i.e. sugary foods and fried foods) and nutritious foods (i.e. fruits and vegetables) Counsel mothers, caregivers, family members and influential community members to feed children appropriately and to not consume junk foods Avoid providing sugar-sweetened beverages during community/mothers’ support group sessions and postnatal care visits Develop monitoring and evaluation indicators and targets for national, district/health facility and community levels Include overweight indicators in national development plans |
Fig. 2Example of how Trials for Improved Practices (TIPs) addressed junk food as an infant feeding problem in Egypt
Fig. 3Step-by-step implementation guide to address overweight and obesity in low- and middle-income countries (DHS, Demographic and Health Survey)