Thinness, overweight, and obesity in 6- to 9-year-old children from 36 countries: The World Health Organization European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative-COSI 2015-2017.
Angela SpinelliMarta BuoncristianoPaola NardoneGregor StarcTatjana HejgaardPetur Benedikt JúlíussonAnne-Siri FismenDaniel WeghuberSanja Musić MilanovićMarta García-SolanoHarry RutterIvo RakovacAlexandra CucuLacramioara Aurelia BrinduseAna Isabel RitoViktoria Anna KovacsMirjam M HeinenEha NurkPäivi MäkiShynar AbdrakhmanovaSanavbar RakhmatulleoevaVesselka DulevaVictoria Farrugia Sant'AngeloAnna FijałkowskaAndrea GualtieriElena SacchiniMaria HassapidouJolanda HyskaCecily C KelleherEnisa KujundžićMarie KunešováEliza Markidou IoannidouSergej M OstojicValentina PeterkovaAušra PetrauskienėStevo PopovićIveta PuduleKenisha Russell JonssonMaria Ángeles Dal-Re SaavedraBenoît SalanaveLela ShengeliaIgor SpiroskiMaya TanrygulyyevaĽubica TicháZhamilya UsupovaLütfiye Hilal OzcebeAkbota AbildinaKarin SchindlerMartin W WeberAida Filipović HadžiomeragićMarina MelkumovaDragana StojisavljevićKhadichamo BoymatovaJulianne WilliamsJoão BredaPublished in: Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity (2021)
In 2015-2017, the fourth round of the World Health Organization (WHO) European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative (COSI) was conducted in 36 countries. National representative samples of children aged 6-9 (203,323) were measured by trained staff, with similar equipment and using a standardized protocol. This paper assesses the children's body weight status and compares the burden of childhood overweight, obesity, and thinness in Northern, Eastern, and Southern Europe and Central Asia. The results show great geographic variability in height, weight, and body mass index. On average, the children of Northern Europe were the tallest, those of Southern Europe the heaviest, and the children living in Central Asia the lightest and the shortest. Overall, 28.7% of boys and 26.5% of girls were overweight (including obesity) and 2.5% and 1.9%, respectively, were thin according to the WHO definitions. The prevalence of obesity varied from 1.8% of boys and 1.1% of girls in Tajikistan to 21.5% and 19.2%, respectively, in Cyprus, and tended to be higher for boys than for girls. Levels of thinness, stunting, and underweight were relatively low, except in Eastern Europe (for thinness) and in Central Asia. Despite the efforts to halt it, unhealthy weight status is still an important problem in the WHO European Region.