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A systematic review of environmental factors and obesogenic dietary intakes among adults: are we getting closer to understanding obesogenic environments?

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TLDR
In this article, the authors examined whether physical, social, cultural and economical environmental factors are associated with obesogenic dietary behaviours and overweight/obesity among adults and found that greater accessibility to supermarkets or less access to takeaway outlets were associated with a lower BMI or prevalence of overweight or obesity.
Abstract
This study examined whether physical, social, cultural and economical environmental factors are associated with obesogenic dietary behaviours and overweight/obesity among adults. Literature searches of databases (i.e. PubMed, CSA Illumina, Web of Science, PsychInfo) identified studies examining environmental factors and the consumption of energy, fat, fibre, fruit, vegetables, sugar-sweetened drinks, meal patterns and weight status. Twenty-eight studies were in-scope, the majority (n= 16) were conducted in the USA. Weight status was consistently associated with the food environment; greater accessibility to supermarkets or less access to takeaway outlets were associated with a lower BMI or prevalence of overweight/obesity. However, obesogenic dietary behaviours did not mirror these associations; mixed associations were found between the environment and obesogenic dietary behaviours. Living in a socioeconomically-deprived area was the only environmental factor consistently associated with a number of obesogenic dietary behaviours. Associations between the environment and weight status are more consistent than that seen between the environment and dietary behaviours. The environment may play an important role in the development of overweight/obesity, however the dietary mechanisms that contribute to this remain unclear and the physical activity environment may also play an important role in weight gain, overweight and obesity.

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Citations
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‘Small Changes’ to Diet and Physical Activity Behaviors for Weight Management

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References
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Book

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TL;DR: The Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions is the official document that describes in detail the process of preparing and maintaining Cochrane systematic reviews on the effects of healthcare interventions.
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Mortality by cause for eight regions of the world: Global Burden of Disease Study

TL;DR: The Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) used various data sources and made corrections for miscoding of important diseases (eg, ischaemic heart disease) to estimate worldwide and regional cause-of-death patterns in 1990, and the estimates by cause provide a foundation for a more informed debate on public-health priorities.
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Principles of Nutritional Assessment

TL;DR: Assessment of nutrient intakes from food consumption data and the status of vitamins, A, D, and E, and niacin, and trace element status and nutritional assessment of hospital patients.
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A Systematic Review of the Evidence Supporting a Causal Link Between Dietary Factors and Coronary Heart Disease

TL;DR: The evidence supports a valid association of a limited number of dietary factors and dietary patterns with CHD, and only a Mediterranean dietary pattern is related to CHD in randomized trials.
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Healthy nutrition environments: concepts and measures.

TL;DR: The authors provide a conceptual model of a healthy nutrition environment, then review the types of measures required to assess various aspects of this environment.
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