Scientific News Health care Problems of superfluous weight UNIQUE UNC STUDY CONFIRMS SUSPECTED WORLDWIDE EPIDEMIC OF CHILDHOOD OBESITY
UNIQUE UNC STUDY
CONFIRMS SUSPECTED WORLDWIDE EPIDEMIC OF CHILDHOOD OBESITY
Twenty-five of every 100
U.S. children are either
overweight or obese, but children from other major nations are beginning to
weigh too much as well, a new University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill study concludes. Sixteen percent of Russian youths
are overweight or downright fat, and the figure for Chinese children is 7
percent.
"Child obesity is becoming a public health
problem worldwide, but the prevalence of obesity varies remarkably across
countries with different socioeconomic development levels," said Dr. Youfa
Wang, who conducted the study through UNC’s
Carolina Population Center and School of Public Health. "Different
socioeconomic groups are at different risks, and the relationship between
obesity and socioeconomic status varies across countries."
Wang completed a doctorate in nutritional
epidemiology at UNC last spring and recently joined the University of Illinois
at Chicago as assistant professor of human nutrition. A report on his findings
appears in the October issue of the International Journal of Epidemiology, which
is being published Oct. 24.
In the United States, he found the prevalence of
obesity and overweight in children to be 11.1 percent and 14.3 percent,
respectively. In Russia, rates were 6 percent and 10 percent, respectively. In
China, the percentages were 3.6 and 3.4.
"Chinese children from more affluent
families were more likely to be obese, but in the United States, children from
poorer families were at higher risk," Wang said. "In Russia, both
higher- and lower-income families’ children were likely to be obese when
compared with those from medium-income families. Obesity was more prevalent in
urban areas of China and in rural areas of Russia."
Excessive body fat, especially in children,
concerns health professionals since it promotes heart disease and diabetes, he
said.
For the first time, the researcher used
comparable data for children ages 6 to 18 from nationwide health surveys
conducted in the United States from 1988 to 1994, in China in 1993 and in Russia
in 1992. Previous studies could not tap such data, and so accurate comparisons
could not be made from one country to another.
He selected the three nations since they are
among the world’s most populous, occupy three continents and represent three
different levels of economic development. Together they account for about a
quarter of the world population.
"Although the problem of childhood obesity
is much more serious in the United States than in Russia and China, we did
observe in those countries a very remarkable increase, especially among younger
children, those in urban areas and those in high socioeconomic groups,"
Wang said. Generally, excess body weight in developing countries reflects enough
income to buy more food, particularly high-fat and high energy-density foods
such as meats, he said. In wealthy countries like the United States, many poorer
people still can overeat but are unaware of or ignore the health risks.
Wang’s study was prompted by a recent World
Health Organization determination that an examination of obesity in children and
adolescents across the world based on a standardized obesity classification
system was urgently needed.
###
The new research confirms the suspected global
epidemic of childhood obesity, he said.
Note: Wang can be reached at 312-355-3382 or youfwang@uic.edu
School of Public Health Contact: Lisa Katz,
919-966-7467
Contact: David Williamson, david_williamson@unc.edu,
919-962-8596, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publishing date: October 31, 2001
Back
|