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Background: Relative prices of healthy/unhealthy foods have been implicated in the obesity epidemic, but never extensively quantified across countries or empirically linked to undernutrition.
Objectives: This study compared relative caloric prices (RCPs) for different food categories across 176 countries and ascertained their associations with dietary indicators and nutrition outcomes.
Methods: We converted prices for 657 standardized food products from the 2011 International Comparison Program into caloric prices using USDA Food Composition tables. We classified products into 21 specific food groups. We constructed RCPs as the ratio of the 3 cheapest products in each food group, relative to the weighted cost of a basket of starchy staples. We analyzed RCP differences across World Bank income levels and regions and used cross-country regressions to explore associations with Demographic Health Survey dietary indicators for women 15-49 y old and children 12-23 mo old and with WHO indicators of the under-5 stunting prevalence and adult overweight prevalence.
Results: Most noncereal foods were relatively cheap in high-income countries, including sugar- and fat-rich foods. In lower-income countries, healthy foods were generally expensive, especially most animal-sourced foods and fortified infant cereals (FICs). Higher RCPs for a food predict lower consumption among children for 7 of 9 food groups. Higher milk and FIC prices were positively associated with international child stunting patterns: a 1-SD increase in milk prices was associated with a 2.8 percentage point increase in the stunting prevalence. Similarly, a 1-SD increase in soft drink prices was associated with a reduction in the overweight prevalence of ∼3.6 percentage points.
Conclusions: Relative food prices vary systematically across countries and partially explain international differences in the prevalences of undernutrition and overweight adults. Future research should focus on how to alter relative prices to achieve better dietary and nutrition outcomes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz158 | DOI Listing |
Health Soc Care Deliv Res
July 2025
Bedfordshire Luton and Milton Keynes Integrated Care Board, Milton Keynes, Luton, UK.
Background: National Health Service England piloted a low-calorie diet programme, delivered through total diet replacement and behaviour change support via 1 : 1, group or digital delivery, to improve type 2 diabetes in adults with excess weight.
Aim: To coproduce a qualitative and economic evaluation of the National Health Service low-calorie diet pilot, integrated with National Health Service data to provide an enhanced understanding of the long-term cost-effectiveness, implementation, equity and transferability across broad and diverse populations.
Research Questions: What are the theoretical principles, behaviour change components, content and mode of delivery of the programme, and is it delivered with fidelity to National Health Service specifications? What are the service provider, user and National Health Service staff experiences of the programme? Do sociodemographics influence programme access, uptake, compliance and success? What aspects of the service work and what do not work, for whom, in what context and why? Can the programme be improved to enhance patient experience and address inequities? What are the programme delivery costs, and policy implications for wide-spread adoption?
Methods: A mixed-methods study underpinned by a realist-informed approach was delivered across five work packages, involving: semistructured interviews with service users ( = 67), National Health Service staff ( = 55), service providers ( = 9); 13 service provider focus groups; and service user surveys ( = 719).
BMJ Open
July 2025
Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Introduction: If a person is in diabetes remission, even if only for a short time, this reduces the risk of later diabetes complications and lowers healthcare costs. A recent study shows that long-term remission of type 2 diabetes can be achieved through calorie restriction using total diet replacement. However, this intervention involves support through face-to-face meetings every 2 to 4 weeks over a 2-year period, which is not feasible in routine care with limited resources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutrients
June 2025
Facultad de Agronomía y Sistemas Naturales, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Avenida Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago 6904411, Chile.
Background/objectives: Addressing the global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate change requires a shift toward healthy and sustainable diets. This study examines the feasibility and cost implications of implementing a Healthy and Sustainable Basic Food Basket in Chile that aligns with the EAT- diet recommendations, through its comparison with the current Basic Food Basket used for the poverty line definition.
Methods: The Healthy and Sustainable Basic Food Basket was constructed based on the EAT- dietary model and was uniquely adapted to reflect the observed consumption patterns of Chile's lowest income quintile, allowing for a more realistic affordability assessment for vulnerable populations.
Public Health Nutr
June 2025
International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Km 17 Recta Cali-Palmira, Palmira, Colombia.
Objective: To determine the minimum cost and affordability of three levels of diet quality in urban households in Cali, Colombia: a caloric-adequate diet, a nutrient-adequate diet, and a recommended diet.
Design: Least-cost diets were estimated for different demographic groups. The Cost of Caloric Adequacy (CoCA) and the Cost of Nutrient Adequacy (CoNA) were computed using linear programming models.
Malays J Med Sci
February 2025
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kelantan, Malaysia.
One in eight people globally, prevalent mainly in some ethnic groups and those from low socioeconomic backgrounds, is a critical global health challenge of obesity. The telehealth system would be valuable in arresting obesity, with better access to care and a supporting digital community that encourages regular practice of physical activities, healthy diets, and health monitoring, all within reach and at affordable prices. Digital health interventions such as telehealth, mHealth applications, and wearable devices are new modalities for the treatment of obesity that increase monitoring of energy expenditure, physical activity level, and caloric intake.
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