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Food environment solutions for childhood obesity in Latin America and among Latinos living in the United States.

Ana Clara da Fonseca Leitão DuranMélissa MialonEric CrosbieMelissa Lorena JensenJennifer L HarrisCarolina BatisCamila CorvalánLindsey Smith Taillie
Published in: Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity (2021)
The food environment is a major contributor to unhealthy diets in children and, therefore, to the increasing rates of obesity. Acclaimed by scholars across the world, Latin American countries have been leaders in implementing policies that target different aspects of the food environment. Evidence on the nature and to what extent children are exposed and respond to unhealthy food environments in the region and among Latinos in the United States is, however, deficient. The objective of this review is to use the integrated International Network for Food and Obesity/noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) Research, Monitoring and Action Support (INFORMAS) framework to create healthy food environment to (i) compare the key elements of childhood obesity-related food environments in Latin America and for Latinos living in the United States; (ii) describe the evidence on solutions to improve childhood obesity-related food environments; and (iii) identify research priorities to inform solutions to fight childhood obesity in these populations. We found that an integrated body of evidence is needed to inform an optimal package of policies to improve food environments to which children in Latin America and Latino children in the United States are exposed and more efficiently translate policy solutions to help curb growing childhood obesity levels across borders.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • young adults
  • type diabetes
  • insulin resistance
  • weight loss
  • metabolic syndrome
  • risk assessment
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • climate change
  • quality improvement
  • african american
  • wild type