Poorest countries facing both obesity and malnutrition: Lancet study

A third of the poorest countries in the world are dealing with the double burden of high levels of obesity as well as under-nourishment, according to a study published in The Lancet journal.
A third of the poorest countries in the world are dealing with the double burden of high levels of obesity as well as under-nourishment, according to a study published in The Lancet journal.
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AFP, Paris :

 Low- and middle-income countries risk seeing their development progress slashed by the double-edged sword of obesity and undernutrition, both caused by a lack of access to affordable healthy food, a report in The Lancet warned Monday. This “double burden of malnutrition”, or DBM, affects more than a third of some 130 countries classed as low-and middle-income, the report in the medical journal said. More alarming, it is increasingly seen in the same household – most commonly an overweight mother and a child stunted by undernutrition living under the same roof.
Both forms of malnutrition are linked to health problems and premature death, weighing heavily on a country’s health system and labour productivity. The report, compiled in collaboration with the World Health Organization, said being overweight can no longer be considered a rich country problem, nor undernourishment a preserve of the poor.
“While more than 149 million children have stunted growth, childhood overweight and obesity are increasing almost everywhere, and suboptimal diets are responsible for one in five (22 percent) adult deaths globally,” it said.
“The economic, social, and environmental costs of inaction will hinder the growth and development of individuals and societies for decades to come,” it warned.

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