Thinness, overweight, and obesity in 6‐ to 9‐year‐old children from 36 countries: The World Health Organization European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative—COSI 2015–2017

Angela Spinelli(Istituto Superiore di Sanità), Marta Buoncristiano(WHO European Office for the Prevention and Control of NCD), Paola Nardone(Istituto Superiore di Sanità), Gregor Starc(University of Ljubljana), Tatjana Hejgaard(Danish Business Authority), Pétur Benedikt Júlíusson(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Anne‐Siri Fismen(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Daniel Weghuber(Paracelsus Medical University), Sanja Musić Milanović(University of Zagreb), Marta García‐Solano(Fundación Española de la Nutrición), Harry Rutter(University of Bath), Ivo Rakovac(WHO European Office for the Prevention and Control of NCD), Alexandra Cucu(Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy), Lăcrămioara Aurelia Brîndușe(Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy), Ana Isabel Rito(National Institute of Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge), Viktória Kovács(Hungarian School Sport Federation), Mirjam M. Heinen(University College Dublin), Eha Nurk(National Institute for Health Development), Päivi Mäki(Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare), Shynar Abdrakhmanova(Kazakhstan Medical University), Sanavbar Rakhmatulleoeva(Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan), Vesselka Duleva(National Center of Public Health and Analyses), Victoria Farrugia Sant’Angelo(Primary HealthCare), Anna Fijałkowska(Mother and Child Foundation), Andrea Gualtieri(University of the Republic of San Marino), Elena Sacchini(University of the Republic of San Marino), Maria Hassapidou(International Hellenic University), Jolanda Hyska(University of Medicine Tirana), Cecily C. Kelleher(University College Dublin), Enisa Kujundžić(University of Montenegro), Marie Kunešová(Institute of Endocrinology), Eliza Markidou Ioannidou(Ministry of Health), Sergej M. Ostojić(University of Novi Sad), Valentina Peterkova(Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation), Aušra Petrauskienė(Lithuanian University of Health Sciences), Stevo Popović(University of Montenegro), Iveta Pudule(Riga Technical College), Kenisha Russell Jonsson(Public Health Agency of Sweden), M. A. Saavedra(Fundación Española de la Nutrición), Benoît Salanave(Université Sorbonne Paris Nord), Lela Shengelia(National Center for Disease Control and Public Health), Igor Spiroski(Institute of public health of Republic of Macedonia), Maya Tanrygulyyeva(Academy of Science of Turkmenistan), Ľubica Tichá(Comenius University Bratislava), Zhamilya Usupova(The Ministry of Education and Science of the Kyrgyz Republic), Lütfiye Hilal Ozcebe(Hacettepe University), Akbota Abildina(National Center of Public Health of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Kazakhstan), Karin Schindler(Federal Ministry of Social Affairs, Health, Care and Consumer Protection), Martin Weber(World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe), Aida Filipović Hadžiomeragić(Institute of Metrology of Bosnia and Herzegovina), Marina Melkumova(Arabkir Joint Medical Center), Dragana Stojisavljević(University of Banja Luka), Khadichamo Boymatova(Technological University of Tajikistan), Julianne Williams(WHO European Office for the Prevention and Control of NCD), João Breda(WHO European Office for the Prevention and Control of NCD)
Obesity Reviews
July 7, 2021
Cited by 141Open Access
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Abstract

In 2015-2017, the fourth round of the World Health Organization (WHO) European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative (COSI) was conducted in 36 countries. National representative samples of children aged 6-9 (203,323) were measured by trained staff, with similar equipment and using a standardized protocol. This paper assesses the children's body weight status and compares the burden of childhood overweight, obesity, and thinness in Northern, Eastern, and Southern Europe and Central Asia. The results show great geographic variability in height, weight, and body mass index. On average, the children of Northern Europe were the tallest, those of Southern Europe the heaviest, and the children living in Central Asia the lightest and the shortest. Overall, 28.7% of boys and 26.5% of girls were overweight (including obesity) and 2.5% and 1.9%, respectively, were thin according to the WHO definitions. The prevalence of obesity varied from 1.8% of boys and 1.1% of girls in Tajikistan to 21.5% and 19.2%, respectively, in Cyprus, and tended to be higher for boys than for girls. Levels of thinness, stunting, and underweight were relatively low, except in Eastern Europe (for thinness) and in Central Asia. Despite the efforts to halt it, unhealthy weight status is still an important problem in the WHO European Region.


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