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Underweight, overweight or obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in Bangladesh, 2004 to 2018
by
Menon, Purnima
, Das Gupta, Rajat
, Scott, Samuel
, Billah, Sk. Masum
, Khuong, Long Quynh
, Tauseef, Salauddin
, Nguyen, Phuong Hong
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diagnosis
/ Households
/ Hypertension
/ Malnutrition
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Men
/ Nutrition
/ Obesity
/ Overweight
/ People and Places
/ Risk factors
/ Trends
/ Undernutrition
/ Underweight
/ Women
/ Womens health
2022
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Underweight, overweight or obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in Bangladesh, 2004 to 2018
by
Menon, Purnima
, Das Gupta, Rajat
, Scott, Samuel
, Billah, Sk. Masum
, Khuong, Long Quynh
, Tauseef, Salauddin
, Nguyen, Phuong Hong
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diagnosis
/ Households
/ Hypertension
/ Malnutrition
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Men
/ Nutrition
/ Obesity
/ Overweight
/ People and Places
/ Risk factors
/ Trends
/ Undernutrition
/ Underweight
/ Women
/ Womens health
2022
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Underweight, overweight or obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in Bangladesh, 2004 to 2018
by
Menon, Purnima
, Das Gupta, Rajat
, Scott, Samuel
, Billah, Sk. Masum
, Khuong, Long Quynh
, Tauseef, Salauddin
, Nguyen, Phuong Hong
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diagnosis
/ Households
/ Hypertension
/ Malnutrition
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Men
/ Nutrition
/ Obesity
/ Overweight
/ People and Places
/ Risk factors
/ Trends
/ Undernutrition
/ Underweight
/ Women
/ Womens health
2022
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Underweight, overweight or obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in Bangladesh, 2004 to 2018
Journal Article
Underweight, overweight or obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in Bangladesh, 2004 to 2018
2022
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Overview
Background and objectives Bangladesh is experiencing a nutrition transition with an increase in the double burden of malnutrition and non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This study sought to: 1) examine trends and differences in underweight, overweight/obesity, hypertension and diabetes by gender, area of residence, and wealth in Bangladesh from 2004 to 2018, 2) assess what factors contributed to changes in these outcomes. Methods We used data from five rounds of the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Surveys (n = 76,758 women 15-49y and 10,900 men 18-95y in total). We calculated differences, slope index of inequality (SII) and concentration index (CIX) to examine trends over time and differences in outcomes by wealth and residence. We identified determinants and estimated drivers of changes in outcomes using regression-based decomposition. Results Between 2004 and 2018, underweight prevalence decreased in both women (33% to 12%) and men (26% to 18%), whereas overweight/obesity increased (17% to 49% in women and 21% to 34% in men). Hypertension also increased in both women (31% to 44%) and men (19% to 33%) while diabetes changed marginally (11% to 14%). In all years, underweight was concentrated in poorer and rural households while overweight/obesity, diabetes and hypertension were concentrated in wealthier and urban households. Wealth inequity decreased over time for underweight, changed little for overweight/obesity, and increased for hypertension and diabetes among men. Increases in wealth explained 35% to 50% of the reduction in underweight and 30% to 57% of the increase in overweight/obesity. Conclusion Our findings imply that double duty actions are required to sustain the decrease in undernutrition and slow the increase in overweight/obesity and NCDs across diverse socioeconomic sections of the population in Bangladesh.
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