Sunday, October 23, 2011

Battling the Bulge

Some innovative social policy this week in Mexico, where the federal government been expressing some palpable alarm over rising obesity among children and adults. I'm sure that Mexico now is the fattest nation in the world and, if they aren't, they are right behind the US in this dubious regard. From a country that was worried about infectious disease deaths just a generation ago to one that is increasingly burdened by diabetes and heart disease comes a new social policy that aggressively seeks to reduce obesity in children by banning junk food, increase hours of physical education, and provide nutritional education in a school based setting. Only time will tell whether they can get people to substitute agua for refrescas, but I like where they are headed with this multi-pronged approach. I know there is some evidence that each of these interventions could provide positive benefits alone (see, for example, here), so perhaps there will be a bigger kick from all three together.

On our side of the border comes some new evidence that your neighborhood matters as far as obesity goes. A study in this week's New England Journal of Medicine finds that poor households randomized to receiving housing vouchers enabling them to move to nicer neighborhoods were significantly less likely to be obese and have elevated hemoglobin A1c levels (a marker of blood sugar content used to diagnose, and track response to treatment for, diabetes). This experiment validates a long-standing hunch that neighborhoods matter for obesity. The question now is what exactly matters, i.e., what is the mechanism behind this causal pathway? We obviously need to know this in order to design targeted policies? Is it that better neighborhoods have better designed streets that encourage walking? The presence of parks? Are there positive peer effects from health nuts? Better grocery stores and more healthy food options relative to junk food options? Better access to primary care docs? I'm awaiting the follow up study which tries to tease these different possibilities apart.

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