Obese cities: how our environment shapes overweight
Obese cities: how our environment shapes overweight
The rapid rise in obesity rates over the last 30 years has profound implications for the health of populations. That this rise has occurred over a relatively short biological time scale suggests that changes in the environments to which we are exposed may be to blame, rather than individual genetic endowment. Focusing on developed world nations, this article briefly reviews this emerging ‘ecological’ perspective in the search for the causes of obesity. This article explores how aspects of our environment might disrupt ‘energy balance’ through influencing food consumption and physical activity. It focuses on three hypothesised pathways for environmental risk: the organisation of built physical space, the social environment and the political environment. The article demonstrates that a consideration of scale and context are also important in the search for the environmental drivers of weight gain
518-535
Smith, Dianna M.
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Cummins, Steven
af945c4e-6089-4698-bf10-3d0db8d63307
January 2009
Smith, Dianna M.
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Cummins, Steven
af945c4e-6089-4698-bf10-3d0db8d63307
Abstract
The rapid rise in obesity rates over the last 30 years has profound implications for the health of populations. That this rise has occurred over a relatively short biological time scale suggests that changes in the environments to which we are exposed may be to blame, rather than individual genetic endowment. Focusing on developed world nations, this article briefly reviews this emerging ‘ecological’ perspective in the search for the causes of obesity. This article explores how aspects of our environment might disrupt ‘energy balance’ through influencing food consumption and physical activity. It focuses on three hypothesised pathways for environmental risk: the organisation of built physical space, the social environment and the political environment. The article demonstrates that a consideration of scale and context are also important in the search for the environmental drivers of weight gain
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Published date: January 2009
Organisations:
Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)
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Local EPrints ID: 382524
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382524
ISSN: 1749-8198
PURE UUID: 5ab9fde2-89ac-422a-a4f1-c93376bb3d7b
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2015 13:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53
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Author:
Steven Cummins
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