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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 84, No. 2, 289-298, August 2006
© 2006 American Society for Nutrition


COMMENTARY

Global nutrition dynamics: the world is shifting rapidly toward a diet linked with noncommunicable diseases1,2,3

Barry M Popkin

1 From the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC

Global energy imbalances and related obesity levels are rapidly increasing. The world is rapidly shifting from a dietary period in which the higher-income countries are dominated by patterns of degenerative diseases (whereas the lower- and middle-income countries are dominated by receding famine) to one in which the world is increasingly being dominated by degenerative diseases. This article documents the high levels of overweight and obesity found across higher- and lower-income countries and the global shift of this burden toward the poor and toward urban and rural populations. Dietary changes appear to be shifting universally toward a diet dominated by higher intakes of animal and partially hydrogenated fats and lower intakes of fiber. Activity patterns at work, at leisure, during travel, and in the home are equally shifting rapidly toward reduced energy expenditure. Large-scale decreases in food prices (eg, beef prices) have increased access to supermarkets, and the urbanization of both urban and rural areas is a key underlying factor. Limited documentation of the extent of the increased effects of the fast food and bottled soft drink industries on this nutrition shift is available, but some examples of the heterogeneity of the underlying changes are presented. The challenge to global health is clear.

Key Words: Nutrition transition • global obesity • edible oils • caloric sweeteners • physical inactivity




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