Overweight And Obesity ✅ Flashcards

1
Q

What is used as a proxy measurement for fatness?

A

BMI

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2
Q

What is the limitation of using BMI as a measurement for fatness?

A

Adverse heatlh effects of being overewight or obese are thought to arise from excess adiposity, rather than alterations in lean mass

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3
Q

Why is BMI used as a proxy measurement for fatness rather than measuring excess adiposity?

A

It is difficult to measure fatness accurately at an individual level

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4
Q

What BMI is considered overweight in adults?

A

25

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5
Q

What BMI is considered obese in adults?

A

30

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6
Q

What are the BMI cutoffs used to describe overweight/obese in adults based on?

A

Health risks such as the development of T2DM

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7
Q

Why are BMI cutoffs to define overweight/obesity not used in children?

A

They manifest fewer immediate health complications, and so any cutoff is arbitary

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8
Q

How are overweight and obesity defined in children?

A
  • Defined BMI centiles based on local reference data

- Use International Obesity Task Force BMI cut-offs

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9
Q

What is the aim of defining obesity in terms of BMI centiles using local reference data?

A

Identify extremes within the population

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10
Q

What is ‘overweight’ defined as with reference to BMI centiles using local reference data?

A

BMI >91st centile

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11
Q

What is ‘obese’ defined as with reference to BMI centiles using local reference data?

A

BMI >98th centile

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12
Q

When is the approach of defining overweight and obesity using the International Obesity Task Force BMI cutoffs frequently used?

A
  • Research

- When making comparisons between countries

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13
Q

How were the International Obesity Task Force BMI cut-offs generated?

A

Using reference data from >190,000 children from 6 countries, age and sex specific cut-off points for BMI were defined from ages 2-18 using dataset-specific centiles linked to adult BMI cut off points

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14
Q

From a simplistic point of view, what does excess weight gain result from?

A

Imbalance of energy intake and expenditure

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15
Q

What is the limitation of considering excess weight gain to occur when there is an imbalance of emergy intake and expenditure?

A

Extremely difficult in practice, cannot rely simply on improving nutrition given multifactorial nature of eating behaviour and lifestyle

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16
Q

What does the prevention and treatment of obesity require?

A

Multi-component interventions

17
Q

What do multi-component interventions to prevent and treat obesity need to address?

A
  • Nutrition
  • Diet
  • Activity
  • Lifestyle
18
Q

Who needs to be involved in interventions to prevent and treat obesity in children?

A

The whole family

19
Q

Are programmes for preventing and treating obesity?

A

Most work in short term, but lack of evidence for sustained effort beyond period of intervention

20
Q

Why is it difficult for programmes aiming to prevent and treat obesity to achieve sustained improvement?

A

Doesn’t address the availability of unhealthy food or increasingly obesogenic environment found in countries such as UK

21
Q

What is required to manage the wider environment to prevent and treat obesity?

A

Intervention at population level