Skip Navigation

新闻

  • 打印
  • 发表评论
  • | 共享

Obesity research 'needs a multi-disciplinary approach'

T. V. Padma

2008年7月23日 | EN

World is facing an obesity pandemic due to food globalisation

Flickr/permanently scatterbrained

[BARCELONA] Researchers need to link medical causes of obesity with changing diet patterns caused by the globalisation of food and agriculture sectors to tackle the obesity pandemic, say food scientists.

Marta Guadalupe Rivera-Ferre, a researcher from the department of food and animal nutrition at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain, told SciDev.Net that obesity researchers should collaborate with social science researchers and adopt a more multi-disciplinary approach to understand the worldwide rise in obesity.

Rivera-Ferre says narrowing the research focus to metabolic and genetic causes of obesity is inadequate, as the problem has wider socioeconomic dimensions. "If it were all about a gene or metabolic defect, it does not account for the huge rising numbers of obese people across the globe," she says.

Rivera-Ferre cautioned a session on obesity at the Euroscience Open Forum in Barcelona this week (21 July) that globalisation of agriculture and trade has led to a new culture of multinational corporations monopolising the processed food industry and retail markets.

This has led to diets increasingly being dictated by products manufactured by large private firms. Other factors contributing to the rise in obesity include a more sedentary lifestyle with little exercise.

Liz Young, senior lecturer at the faculty of health and sciences at the University of Staffordshire, United Kingdom, said that studies have found a link between diet transitions in developing countries and obesity.

Many people in developing countries are leaving behind their traditional diets rich in raw foods with minimal processing, for processed foods rich in sugars and fats produced by global corporations.

This change in diet patterns has serious implications for Africa and Asia according to scientists. These countries are facing a paradoxical form of malnutrition, arising from hunger and over-eating the wrong kind of food, says Riverra-Ferre.

A study in the July/August issue of Health Affairs reported obesity rates were soaring in China, with more than 25 per cent of Chinese adults obese (see Study finds Chinese obesity rates soaring).

添加你的评论

这是您的网络:张贴您的评论,和别人分享您关于我们的任何文章的观点。

您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.

所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。

只要适当标明来源与作者就可以免费复制科学与发展网络所有内容。更多详情请参见 发表评论.

返回 新闻
到达顶部