Shifting a whole population towards a healthy weight requires action targeting the root causes of obesity
The headline finding from our 2003 paper was a 2.5-times increase in the prevalence of obesity since 1980, with 20.8% of Australian adults found to be obese. Reporting the national obesity prevalence for the first time since 1995, this paper was one of the key outcomes from the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle study (AusDiab).1 AusDiab was the first Australian national diabetes study; it showed an adult prevalence of diabetes of 7.4% and that of prediabetes (elevated blood glucose levels but below the cut-point for diabetes) at 16.4%.2 These figures meant that prevention of the twin epidemics of obesity and diabetes was placed very much on the national agenda. AusDiab went on to become a longitudinal study, with the follow-ups of the cohort at 5 and 12 years providing invaluable data for studying obesity, diabetes, prediabetes, hypertension and kidney disease in individuals as they age. The more than 200 papers now published using data from this study have played an important role in influencing national public health policy and action.
With the prevalence of obesity continuing to climb since the baseline AusDiab survey (28.3% in the 2011–12 National Health Survey3), it is becoming clear that the lifestyle change programs and medical interventions that are often successful in trials and for individuals are effectively individual sandbags against the flood of obesity. Successfully shifting a whole population towards a healthy weight is likely to also require action targeting some of the root causes of obesity. Our increasingly sedentary and inactive lifestyles in combination with an environment full of cheap, tasty, heavily marketed and energy-dense foods make us highly susceptible to weight gain. Although we are each responsible for our own behaviour, these environmental and cultural factors combine to effectively conspire against healthy choices.4 In addition, a focus on adult lifestyles, although important, ignores the increasing body of data suggesting that the genesis of adult obesity is biological and cultural factors operating very early in life.5
A promising next generation of environmental obesity prevention initiatives include the excellent work done to improve the school food environment in many countries (now championed in the United States by First Lady Michelle Obama6), whole-of-community interventions such as the Healthy Together Communities program in Victoria7 and excellent work by researchers,8 retailers9 and others10 to change the way food is marketed and sold. Obesity prevention in mothers and in infants11 and prevention of excess gestational weight gain are further promising approaches. The combination of initiatives such as these will hopefully mean that when the Journal celebrates another decade, we will also be finally able to celebrate a reduction in Australia's obesity prevalence.
Provenance: Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.
- 1. Cameron AJ, Welborn TA, Zimmet PZ, et al. Overweight and obesity in Australia: the 1999-2000 Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study (AusDiab). Med J Aust 2003; 178: 427-432. <MJA full text>
- 2. Dunstan DW, Zimmet PZ, Welborn TA, et al. The rising prevalence of diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance: the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study. Diabetes Care 2002; 25: 829-834.
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- 6. The White House. The White House and USDA announce School Wellness Standards [media release]. 25 Feb 2014. http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/02/25/white-house-and-usda-announce-school-wellness-standards (accessed Feb 2014).
- 7. Victorian Government Department of Health. Healthy Together Victoria. 2011. http://www.health.vic.gov.au/prevention/healthytogether.htm#healthy (accessed Apr 2014).
- 8. Foster GD, Karpyn A, Wojtanowski AC, et al. Placement and promotion strategies to increase sales of healthier products in supermarkets in low-income, ethnically diverse neighborhoods: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr 2014; 99: 1359-1368.
- 9. The Food Trust, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Harnessing the power of supermarkets to help reverse childhood obesity. Princeton, NJ: RWJF, 2011. http://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/reports/2011/rwjf69943 (accessed May 2014).
- 10. Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance. People's food plan. http://www.australianfoodsovereigntyalliance.org/peoples-food-plan (accessed Apr 2014).
- 11. Campbell KJ, Lioret S, McNaughton SA, et al. A parent-focused intervention to reduce infant obesity risk behaviors: a randomized trial. Pediatrics 2013; 131: 652-660.
Adrian Cameron is supported by a fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council (1013313).
No relevant disclosures.