Journal
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 342-346Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.ejcn.1600960
Keywords
obesity; adults; secular trend; income; developing countries; Brazil
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Objective: To describe secular trends in obesity in various settings and socio-economic groups of the adult population of Brazil. Methods: Trend analysis of the prevalence of obesity in adults aged over 20 y (body mass index greater than or equal to 30.0 kg/m(2)) applied to anthropometric and socio-economic data collected by three comparable household surveys undertaken in the two most populated Brazilian regions in 1975 (n = 95,062), 1989 (n = 15,585) and 1997 (n = 10,680). Results: While previous trends (1975-1989) showed increasing obesity prevalence for all population groups except for men in rural areas, recent trends (1989-1997) have pointed to a much more complex picture where increases in obesity tend to be more intense in men than in women, in rural than in urban settings and in poorer than in richer families. Particularly notable was the fact that, in the recent period, obesity was actually reduced for women belonging to the upper income groups, especially in urban settings. Conclusion: Earlier obesity trends in Brazil entirely agree with what has been described for both developed and developing countries where reliable secular trend information exists, but the 1989-1997 trend of a substantial reduction in the prevalence of obesity among upper income urban women (12.8-9.2%, or a 28% reduction), is unique in a developing country and, indeed, up to now has only been detected in Scandinavian populations. It is speculated that this declining obesity trend may be a result of an intense mass media work focused on combating a sedentary life style and promoting better food habits.
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