Abstract

The objectives were to highlight the burden of overweight and obesity as an additional area of importance for the malnutrition agenda in Uganda and to provide evidence-based considerations for stakeholders involved. Introduction: Mirroring other Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), Uganda is experiencing a “double burden” of over-nutrition related issues - both obesity and overweight, and related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) alongside the under-nutrition that has long plagued the country. Despite the commonplace assumption that under-nutrition is the predominant form of malnutrition in Uganda, we explore recent literature that in fact, challenges this notion. While food insecurity has contributed to the under-nutrition problem, a lack of dietary diversity also has a demonstrated role in increasing over-nutrition. We cannot afford to ignore over-nutrition concomitant with stunting and wasting in the country. Increase in the burden of this less acknowledged form of malnutrition in Uganda is critical to investigate, and yet poorly understood. A move towards increased regionally targeted over-nutrition research, funding, government prioritization and advocacy is needed.

Highlights

  • The objectives were to highlight the burden of overweight and obesity as an additional area of importance for the malnutrition agenda in Uganda and to provide evidence-based considerations for stakeholders involved

  • Despite the commonplace assumption that undernutrition is the predominant form of malnutrition in Uganda, recent literature, challenges this notion

  • While food insecurity has contributed to the under-nutrition problem, a lack of dietary diversity has a demonstrated role in increasing over-nutrition

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Summary

Open Access

Obesity as a form of malnutrition: over-nutrition on the Uganda “malnutrition” agenda.

Areas of specific research need in Uganda
Findings
Policy and funding
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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