2022
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191811156
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Are Spanish Surveys Ready to Detect the Social Factors of Obesity?

Abstract: The social origins of obesity are now recognised: a problem that is initially biological is today a public health problem with a social origin. This paper raises the question of whether the official statistical sources used to understand changes in diet are able to detect this shift in analysis. After reviewing the social factors that explain obesity, we examine the official Spanish statistics that can inform about dietary changes: the ENS National Health Survey, the EPF Family Budget Survey, and the EET Time … Show more

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“…Their results show that influences on eating situations are mainly driven by three themes: social ghettoization and culinary loneliness; stigma, shame, feeling like a burden, and loneliness; and exclusion or self-exclusion at the dining table. Additionally, Díaz-Méndez et al [8] analyzed the social factors that contribute to obesity as a public health problem. Based on the case of Spain, they reveal that while official statistics include socio-demographic variables, health and social variables, always understood from a social perspective, could allow the provision of more tangible support for halting obesity [9].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their results show that influences on eating situations are mainly driven by three themes: social ghettoization and culinary loneliness; stigma, shame, feeling like a burden, and loneliness; and exclusion or self-exclusion at the dining table. Additionally, Díaz-Méndez et al [8] analyzed the social factors that contribute to obesity as a public health problem. Based on the case of Spain, they reveal that while official statistics include socio-demographic variables, health and social variables, always understood from a social perspective, could allow the provision of more tangible support for halting obesity [9].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%