R
Rasmus Wibaek
Researcher at University of Copenhagen
Publications - 23
Citations - 572
Rasmus Wibaek is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 14 publications receiving 299 citations. Previous affiliations of Rasmus Wibaek include Steno Diabetes Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The double burden of malnutrition: aetiological pathways and consequences for health.
Jonathan C. K. Wells,Ana Lydia Sawaya,Rasmus Wibaek,Rasmus Wibaek,Martha Mwangome,Marios Poullas,Chittaranjan S. Yajnik,Alessandro R Demaio +7 more
TL;DR: Mitigation of the double burden of malnutrition (DBM) will require major societal shifts regarding nutrition and public health, to implement comprehensive change that is sustained over decades, and scaled up into the entire global food system.
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The Dual Burden of Malnutrition Increases the Risk of Cesarean Delivery: Evidence From India.
TL;DR: How the emerging dual burden of malnutrition is likely to impact childbirth in low and middle-income countries is highlighted, as the combination of short maternal stature and maternal overweight or obesity may substantially increase the risk of cesarean delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Body mass index trajectories in early childhood in relation to cardiometabolic risk profile and body composition at 5 years of age.
Rasmus Wibaek,Rasmus Wibaek,Dorte Vistisen,Tsinuel Girma,Bitiya Admassu,Bitiya Admassu,Mubarek Abera,Mubarek Abera,Alemseged Abdissa,Kissi Mudie,Pernille Kæstel,Marit E. Jørgensen,Marit E. Jørgensen,Jonathan C. K. Wells,Kim F. Michaelsen,Henrik Friis,Gregers S. Andersen +16 more
TL;DR: The development of obesity and cardiometabolic risks may be established already in early childhood; thus, the data provide a further basis for timely interventions targeted at young children from low-income countries with unfavorable growth patterns.
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Body composition during early infancy and its relation with body composition at 4 years of age in Jimma, an Ethiopian prospective cohort study
Bitiya Admassu,Bitiya Admassu,Jonathan C. K. Wells,Tsinuel Girma,Tefera Belachew,Christian Ritz,Victor O. Owino,Mubarek Abera,Mubarek Abera,Rasmus Wibaek,Rasmus Wibaek,Kim F. Michaelsen,Pernille Kæstel,Henrik Friis,Gregers S. Andersen +14 more
TL;DR: A higher FFM in early infancy predicted higher FFMI at 4 years while a higher FM accretion during early infancy predict higher FMI at4 years.
Journal ArticleDOI
Associations of fat mass and fat-free mass accretion in infancy with body composition and cardiometabolic risk markers at 5 years: The Ethiopian iABC birth cohort study.
Rasmus Wibaek,Rasmus Wibaek,Dorte Vistisen,Tsinuel Girma,Bitiya Admassu,Bitiya Admassu,Mubarek Abera,Mubarek Abera,Alemseged Abdissa,Marit E. Jørgensen,Marit E. Jørgensen,Pernille Kæstel,Kim F. Michaelsen,Henrik Friis,Jonathan C. K. Wells,Gregers S. Andersen +15 more
TL;DR: FM accretion in early life was positively associated with markers of adiposity and lipid metabolism, but not with blood pressure and cardiometabolic markers related to glucose homeostasis.