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March
2002, Volume 8 No. 1
ARTICLE 8
The Shift in Stages of the
Nutrition Transition in the Developing World Differs from Past
Experiences!
Barry M Popkin
Carolina Population Center University of North Carolina Chapel
Hill, University Square, North Carolina, USA
ABSTRACT
This paper explores the unique nutrition transition shifts in
diet and activity patterns from the period termed the receding
famine pattern to one dominated by nutrition-related noncommunicable
diseases (NR-NCDs). The paper examines the speed and timing of
these changes; unique components, such as the issue of finding both
under- and over-nutrition in the same household; potential
exacerbating biological relationships that contribute to differences
in the rates of change; and political issues. The focus is on lower
and middle income countries of Asia, Africa, the Middle East and
Latin America. These changes are occurring at great speed and at
earlier stages of these countries’ economic and social development.
There are some unique issues that relate to body composition and
potential genetic factors. The significance of the high number of
persons exposed to heavy insults during pregnancy and infancy (fetal
origins hypothesis) and the subsequent rapid shifts in energy
imbalance remains to be understood. Countries that are still
addressing major concerns of under-nutrition are not ready to
address these NR-NCDs. These finding indicate that the developing
world needs to give far greater emphasis to addressing the
prevention of the adverse health consequences of this shift to the
nutrition transition stage of the degenerative diseases.
Full
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