Obesity: the worldwide epidemic.

Over the last decade, the prevalence of obesity in Western and Westernizing countries has more than doubled. A standardized classification of overweight and obesity, based on the body mass index now allows a comparison of prevalence rates worldwide for the first time. In children, the International Obesity Taskforce age, sex, and BMI specific cut-off points are increasingly being used. BMI data are being evaluated as part of a new analysis of the Global Burden of Disease. Prevalence rates for overweight and obese people are very different in each region with the Middle East, Central and Eastern Europe and North American having higher prevalence rates. Obesity is usually now associated with poverty even in developing countries. Relatively new data suggest that abdominal obesity in adults, with its associated enhanced morbidity, occurs particularly in those who had lower birth weights and early childhood stunting.

[1]  W. Blocker,et al.  Obesity: evaluation and treatment. , 1996, Disease-a-month : DM.

[2]  A. Wolf,et al.  The medical‐care cost burden of obesity , 2001, Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity.

[3]  C. Summerbell,et al.  Childhood predictors of adult obesity: a systematic review. , 1999, International journal of obesity and related metabolic disorders : journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity.

[4]  M. Guillaume Defining obesity in childhood: current practice2. , 1999, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[5]  G. Bray,et al.  Dietary fat intake does affect obesity! , 1998, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[6]  A. Roche,et al.  Reference data for obesity. , 1991, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[7]  R. Black,et al.  Zinc Supplementation Reduces the Incidence of Acute Lower Respiratory Infections in Infants and Preschool Children: A Double-blind, Controlled Trial , 1998, Pediatrics.

[8]  M. Guillaume Defining obesity in childhood , 1997 .

[9]  A. R. Frisancho Physical Status: The Use and Interpretation of Anthropometry , 1996, The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[10]  W. Dietz,et al.  Reference data for obesity: 85th and 95th percentiles of body mass index (wt/ht2) and triceps skinfold thickness. , 1991, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[11]  G A Colditz,et al.  Guidelines for healthy weight. , 1999, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  W. Dietz,et al.  Obesity Evaluation and Treatment: Expert Committee Recommendations , 1998 .

[13]  T. Cole,et al.  Review: Measurement and long-term health risks of child and adolescent fatness , 1997, International Journal of Obesity.

[14]  T. Cole,et al.  Establishing a standard definition for child overweight and obesity worldwide: international survey , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[15]  R Martorell,et al.  Infant and child growth and fatness and fat distribution in Guatemalan adults. , 1999, American journal of epidemiology.

[16]  C. Law,et al.  Is blood pressure inversely related to birth weight? The strength of evidence from a systematic review of the literature , 1996, Journal of hypertension.

[17]  S. O’Rahilly,et al.  The perils of portliness: causes and consequences of visceral adiposity. , 2000, Diabetes.

[18]  R. Huxley,et al.  The role of size at birth and postnatal catch‐up growth in determining systolic blood pressure: a systematic review of the literature , 2000, Journal of hypertension.

[19]  Alan D. Lopez,et al.  Global and regional cause-of-death patterns in 1990. , 1994, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[20]  T. Gill,et al.  Obesity: epidemiology and possible prevention. , 2002, Best practice & research. Clinical endocrinology & metabolism.

[21]  Shumei S. Guo,et al.  Tracking of body mass index in children in relation to overweight in adulthood. , 1999, The American journal of clinical nutrition.