Title of article :
Targeting cultural changes supportive of the healthiest lifestyle patterns. A biosocial evidence-base for prevention of obesity
Author/Authors :
David A. Booth، نويسنده , , Phil Booth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
12
From page :
210
To page :
221
Abstract :
This paper argues that the rise in obesity can be slowed only by universal education based on a type of evidence that does not yet exist. On top of literacy and numeracy, people need the ability to preempt the fattening effect of a decrease in habitual physical activity by altering familiar patterns of eating, drinking and exercise in ways that are both maintainable within the individualʹs social and physical environment and also effective at decreasing weight to the asymptote for each sustained change. Hence the prevention of obesity requires locally valid evidence on which changes to specific customary habits actually do avoid unhealthy fattening. Interventions need to focus on antecedents to individuals’ common lapses from the healthy changes in these customs. Yet no research has been funded into the publicʹs descriptions of feasible changes that cause a step down in weight, let alone into the environmental conditions for individuals’ maintenance of those changes. As a result, public health policies on obesity lack scientific basis. When will a start be made on systematic identification of cultural supports to readily executed patterns of lifestyle behaviour which improve health to extents that have been directly measured?
Keywords :
Weight control , Prevention of obesity , Evidence-based policy , Lifestyle behaviour research , Intervention-tracking trials
Journal title :
Appetite
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Appetite
Record number :
955898
Link To Document :
بازگشت