Too
fat, too thin: Report finds malnutrition fuels disease worldwide
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[June 14, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - A third of people
worldwide are either undernourished or overweight, driving increasing
rates of disease and piling pressure on health services, a global report
showed on Tuesday.
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Rates of obese or overweight people are rising in every region of
the world, and in nearly every country, according to the 2016 Global
Nutrition Report - an annual independent stock take of the state of
the world's nutrition.
Malnutrition comes in many forms - including poor child growth and
development and vulnerability to infection among those who do not
get enough food, and obesity, heart disease, diabetes and cancer
risks in people who are overweight or whose blood contains too much
sugar, salt, fat or cholesterol.
According to the report, malnutrition is responsible for nearly half
of all deaths of children under five worldwide and, together with
poor diets, is the number one driver of disease.
At least 57 countries have a double burden of serious levels of
under nutrition – including stunting and anemia – as well as rising
numbers of adults who are overweight or obese, putting a massive
strain on sometimes already fragile health systems.
"One in three people suffer from some form of malnutrition," said
Lawrence Haddad, a senior researcher at the U.S.-based International
Food Policy Research Institute and a co-author of the report.
The report pointed to what it said were "the staggering economic
costs of malnutrition", warning that 11 percent of gross domestic
product (GDP) is lost every year in Africa and Asia due to the
consequences of it.
Individual family costs can also be high. In the United States, when
one person in a household is obese, that household spends on average
an extra 8.0 percent of its annual income on healthcare. In China,
having diabetes results in an annual 16.3 percent loss of income for
the patient.
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Despite the problems, there have been pockets of progress, the
report found.
The number of stunted children under five is falling in every region
except Africa and Oceania, and in Ghana stunting rates have almost
halved – to 19 percent from 36 percent – in just over a decade.
"Despite the challenges, malnutrition is not inevitable," Haddad
said, as long as there was political commitment to tackle the issue.
"Where leaders in government, civil society, academia and business
are committed... anything is possible," he said in a statement with
the report.
An independent expert group produces the Global Nutrition Report and
the International Food Policy Research Institute oversees it. It is
funded by various government and philanthropic donors, including the
U.S. and British governments, the European Commission and the Gates
Foundation.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Dominic Evans)
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