• Photo of a blue measuring tape in the front and an electronic weight bascule with a pair of feet over it

Obesity Prevention

Obesity and being overweight are defined as an abnormal or excessive accumulation of fat that can be detrimental to health.

A simple weight-for-height index commonly used to classify overweight and obesity in adults is the body mass index (BMI). It is calculated by dividing a person's weight in kilograms by the square of the height in meters.

A BMI equal to or greater than 30 is considered obesity, and a BMI equal to or greater than 25 is considered overweight. BMI provides the most useful population-level measure of overweight and obesity as it is the same for both sexes and all ages of adults. However, it should be considered a rough guide because it may not correspond to the same degree of fatness in different individuals.

Obesity is one of the main risk factors for many chronic diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and stroke, as well as several types of cancer. Also, children who are overweight are at higher risk of living with overweight or obesity in adulthood.

For children, age needs to be considered when defining overweight and obesity.

For children under 5 years of age:

  • overweight is weight-for-height greater than 2 standard deviations above WHO Child Growth Standards median; and

  • obesity is weight-for-height greater than 3 standard deviations above the WHO Child Growth Standards median.

For children aged between 5–19 years:

  • overweight is BMI-for-age greater than 1 standard deviation above the WHO Growth Reference median; and

  • obesity is greater than 2 standard deviations above the WHO Growth Reference median.
Key facts

Obesity and being overweight have reached epidemic proportions. Obesity rates have almost tripled since 1975 and have increased almost five times in children and adolescents, affecting people of all ages from all social groups in the Region of the Americas and the world.

The Region of the Americas has the highest prevalence of all the World Health Organization Regions, with 62.5% of adults with overweight or obesity (64.1% of men and 60.9% of women). Looking only at obesity is estimated to affect 28% of the adult population (26% of men and 31% of women).

The epidemic is not alien to children and adolescents. In the 5 to 19 age group, 33.6% of children and adolescents have overweight or obesity, and 8% of children under the age of five, according to the latest estimates from UNICEF, WHO, and the World Bank.

PAHO Response

To address and stop the increase in obesity rates, PAHO promotes and supports policies that allow people to improve their diet, physical activity, and health in the Region of the Americas.

In 2014, PAHO welcomed the unanimous approval of the Plan of Action for the Prevention of Obesity in Children and Adolescents to implement a set of effective policies, laws, regulations, and interventions that take into account priorities and the context of Member States in the following strategic lines of action:

a) Protection, promotion, and support of optimal breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices.
b) Improvement of preschool and school nutrition and physical activity environments.
c) Fiscal policies and regulation of food marketing.
d) Intersectoral actions for health promotion.
e) Surveillance, research, and evaluation.

PAHO also supports the use of WHO-recommended interventions to reduce the obesity epidemic, including WHO's "Best-Buys" related to obesity prevention, the WHO Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health and the Global Action Plan on Physical Activity 2018-2030: More Active People for a Healthier World.

To support the countries of the Region, PAHO continues to provide technical guidance and cooperation to programs and policies and to facilitate collaboration among countries.

PAHO is also working with countries of the Americas in the implementation of the World Health Organization (WHO) Acceleration Plan to STOP Obesity, endorsed during the 75th World Health Assembly in 2022. The aim of the plan is to accelerate progress towards reducing obesity, with a focus on high-burden countries.

 Plan of Action for the Prevention of Obesity in Children and Adolescents
Portada del Plan de Acción para la Prevención de la obesidad en la niñez y la adolescencia, en letras blancas sobre fondo azul oscuro

The countries of the Region of the Americas unanimously approved a five-year plan of action for the prevention of obesity in children and adolescents in 2014.

Among other measures, the plan calls for the implementation of fiscal policies, such as taxes on sugary drinks and products with high caloric content and low nutritional value, the regulation of marketing and food labeling, the improvement of school environments for food and physical activity, and promoting breastfeeding and healthy eating.

DOWNLOAD THE PLAN

Collage de fotos que combina una columna de imágenes a la izquierda, con un bebé lactando, un niño siendo medido, unos niños en bicicleta, unas cajas de cereales con sellos de advertencia, y un grupo de escolares almorzando en la escuela. A la derecha, sobre fondo azul con la silueta del mapa de las Américas en negro, el título de la herramienta en inglés: "Monitoring the implementation Plan of action for the prevention of obesity in children and adolescents". At the bottom, PAHO logo

Implementation monitoring tool

The monitoring tool for the implementation of the Plan of Action for the Prevention of Obesity in Children and Adolescents allows Member States and the public to examine the progress regarding the implementation of the interventions stated in the plan of action.

Acces the tool

 
 
Ilustración rectangular compuesta por una serie de siluetas humanas de colores diversos, que representan a personas con obesidad o sobrepseo, en diferentes posturas. Encima de ella,  el icono del Día Mundial de la Obesidad en inglés.

 

World Obesity Day - 4 March

World Obesity Day is celebrated on March 4. It is a day dedicated to addressing the global obesity epidemic.

In 2024, the campaign theme is "Let's Talk About Obesity And...", aiming to leverage the power of World Obesity Day to start cross-cutting conversations. Looking at health, youth, and the world around us to see how we can address obesity together. This World Obesity Day, let's share knowledge, advocate together, and see obesity from a different perspective.

PAHO urges countries to tackle the main driver of NCDs in the Americas

LINK TO THE GLOBAL CAMPAIGN

GIFs for social media

-	Unregulated marketing of unhealthy foods  contributes to childhood obesity  what needs to change?  remove cartoon characters  add front of pack labelling; green background and a cereal box with a bear and changes to a cereal box with front of pack labelling with no cartoon character; #HealthForAll

Marketing regulations

-	Children are overexposed to unhealthy foods  changes in the school food environment  help prevent childhood obesity; Yellow background with children at a school cafeteria being served unhealthy foods and then being served healthier foods, such as fruits and vegetables; #HealthForAll

Changes in the school food environment

-	Sugary drinks contribute to obesity in youth  taxes on sugary drinks reduce consumption  that means less sugar and better health; Red background with sugary drinks being shown, followed by coins to signify increase in taxes and then a spoon of sugar next to an arrow showing the decrease in sugar; #HealthFor All

Health taxes

Videos

Julian and the lunchroom

Soda tax in México 

Open Streets

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