Recommended community strategies and measurements to prevent obesity in the United States.

IF 33.7 1区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Mmwr Recommendations and Reports Pub Date : 2009-07-24
Laura Kettel Khan, Kathleen Sobush, Dana Keener, Kenneth Goodman, Amy Lowry, Jakub Kakietek, Susan Zaro
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Approximately two thirds of U.S. adults and one fifth of U.S. children are obese or overweight. During 1980--2004, obesity prevalence among U.S. adults doubled, and recent data indicate an estimated 33% of U.S. adults are overweight (body mass index [BMI] 25.0-29.9), 34% are obese (BMI >or=30.0), including nearly 6% who are extremely obese (BMI >or=40.0). The prevalence of being overweight among children and adolescents increased substantially during 1999-2004, and approximately 17% of U.S. children and adolescents are overweight (defined as at or above the 95% percentile of the sex-specific BMI for age growth charts). Being either obese or overweight increases the risk for many chronic diseases (e.g., heart disease, type 2 diabetes, certain cancers, and stroke). Reversing the U.S. obesity epidemic requires a comprehensive and coordinated approach that uses policy and environmental change to transform communities into places that support and promote healthy lifestyle choices for all U.S. residents. Environmental factors (including lack of access to full-service grocery stores, increasing costs of healthy foods and the lower cost of unhealthy foods, and lack of access to safe places to play and exercise) all contribute to the increase in obesity rates by inhibiting or preventing healthy eating and active living behaviors. Recommended strategies and appropriate measurements are needed to assess the effectiveness of community initiatives to create environments that promote good nutrition and physical activity. To help communities in this effort, CDC initiated the Common Community Measures for Obesity Prevention Project (the Measures Project). The objective of the Measures Project was to identify and recommend a set of strategies and associated measurements that communities and local governments can use to plan and monitor environmental and policy-level changes for obesity prevention. This report describes the expert panel process that was used to identify 24 recommended strategies for obesity prevention and a suggested measurement for each strategy that communities can use to assess performance and track progress over time. The 24 strategies are divided into six categories: 1) strategies to promote the availability of affordable healthy food and beverages), 2) strategies to support healthy food and beverage choices, 3) a strategy to encourage breastfeeding, 4) strategies to encourage physical activity or limit sedentary activity among children and youth, 5) strategies to create safe communities that support physical activity, and 6) a strategy to encourage communities to organize for change.

美国预防肥胖的社区战略和措施建议。
大约三分之二的美国成年人和五分之一的美国儿童肥胖或超重。1980-2004 年间,美国成年人的肥胖率翻了一番,最近的数据显示,估计有 33% 的美国成年人超重(体重指数 [BMI] 25.0-29.9),34% 的人肥胖(体重指数 > 或=30.0),其中近 6% 的人极度肥胖(体重指数 > 或=40.0)。在 1999-2004 年期间,儿童和青少年超重率大幅上升,约有 17% 的美国儿童和青少年超重(定义为达到或超过年龄增长图表中特定性别体重指数的 95% 百分位数)。肥胖或超重会增加罹患多种慢性疾病(如心脏病、2 型糖尿病、某些癌症和中风)的风险。要扭转美国肥胖症流行的趋势,需要采取全面、协调的方法,利用政策和环境变化将社区改造成支持和促进所有美国居民选择健康生活方式的地方。环境因素(包括缺乏提供全面服务的杂货店、健康食品的成本不断增加而不健康食品的成本较低、缺乏安全的娱乐和锻炼场所)都会抑制或阻止健康饮食和积极生活行为,从而导致肥胖率上升。我们需要建议的策略和适当的测量方法来评估社区创造良好营养和体育锻炼环境的有效性。为了帮助社区开展这项工作,疾病预防控制中心启动了 "预防肥胖的社区通用措施项目"(措施项目)。措施项目的目标是确定并推荐一套策略和相关措施,供社区和地方政府用于规划和监测环境和政策层面的变化,以预防肥胖症。本报告介绍了专家小组确定 24 项预防肥胖建议策略的过程,以及每项策略的建议衡量标准,社区可用来评估绩效和跟踪长期进展情况。这 24 项策略分为六类:1)促进提供负担得起的健康食品和饮料的战略;(2)支持选择健康食品和饮料的战略;(3)鼓励母乳喂养的战略;(4)鼓励体育活动或限制儿童和青少年久坐不动的战略;(5)创建支持体育活动的安全社区的战略;(6)鼓励社区组织变革的战略。
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来源期刊
Mmwr Recommendations and Reports
Mmwr Recommendations and Reports PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
36.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
期刊介绍: The MMWR series of publications is published by the Office of Science, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S. The MMWR Recommendations and Reports contain in-depth articles that relay policy statements for prevention and treatment in all areas in the CDC’s scope of responsibility (e.g., recommendations from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices).
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