Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences

Despite evidence for the effectiveness of policies that target obesogenic environments, their adoption remains deficient. Using methods and concepts from complexity and political science (Stock-and-Flow analysis and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory) and a qualitative literature review, we developed system maps to identify feedback loops that hinder policymaking on mitigating obesogenic environments and feedback loops that could trigger and sustain policy change. We found numerous self-reinforcing feedback loops that buttress the assumption that obesity is an individual problem, strengthening the biomedical and commercial weight-loss sectors' claim to “ownership” over solutions. That is, improvements in therapies for individuals with obesity reinforces policymakers' reluctance to target obesogenic environments. Random events that focus attention on obesity (e.g., celebrities dismissing soda) could disrupt this cycle, when actors from outside the medical and weight-loss sector (e.g., anti-weight stigma activists) successfully reframe obesity as a societal problem, which requires robust and politically relevant engagement with affected communities prior to such events taking place. Sustained prioritization of policies targeting obesogenic environments requires shared problem ownership of affected communities and nonhealth government sectors, by emphasizing cobenefits of policies that target obesogenic environments (e.g., ultraprocessed food taxation for raising revenue) and solutions that are meaningful for affected communities.

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Main Authors: Hagenaars, Luc L., Schmidt, Laura A., Groeniger, Joost Oude, Bekker, Marleen P.M., ter Ellen, Fleur, de Leeuw, Evelyne, van Lenthe, Frank J., Oude Hengel, Karen M., Stronks, Karien
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:advocacy, framing, obesity, policymaking, public policy, system analysis,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-struggle-to-make-progress-in-obesity-prevention-and-how-we
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6285182024-12-04 Hagenaars, Luc L. Schmidt, Laura A. Groeniger, Joost Oude Bekker, Marleen P.M. ter Ellen, Fleur de Leeuw, Evelyne van Lenthe, Frank J. Oude Hengel, Karen M. Stronks, Karien Article/Letter to editor Obesity Reviews 25 (2024) 5 ISSN: 1467-7881 Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences 2024 Despite evidence for the effectiveness of policies that target obesogenic environments, their adoption remains deficient. Using methods and concepts from complexity and political science (Stock-and-Flow analysis and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory) and a qualitative literature review, we developed system maps to identify feedback loops that hinder policymaking on mitigating obesogenic environments and feedback loops that could trigger and sustain policy change. We found numerous self-reinforcing feedback loops that buttress the assumption that obesity is an individual problem, strengthening the biomedical and commercial weight-loss sectors' claim to “ownership” over solutions. That is, improvements in therapies for individuals with obesity reinforces policymakers' reluctance to target obesogenic environments. Random events that focus attention on obesity (e.g., celebrities dismissing soda) could disrupt this cycle, when actors from outside the medical and weight-loss sector (e.g., anti-weight stigma activists) successfully reframe obesity as a societal problem, which requires robust and politically relevant engagement with affected communities prior to such events taking place. Sustained prioritization of policies targeting obesogenic environments requires shared problem ownership of affected communities and nonhealth government sectors, by emphasizing cobenefits of policies that target obesogenic environments (e.g., ultraprocessed food taxation for raising revenue) and solutions that are meaningful for affected communities. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-struggle-to-make-progress-in-obesity-prevention-and-how-we 10.1111/obr.13705 https://edepot.wur.nl/654297 advocacy framing obesity policymaking public policy system analysis https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic advocacy
framing
obesity
policymaking
public policy
system analysis
advocacy
framing
obesity
policymaking
public policy
system analysis
spellingShingle advocacy
framing
obesity
policymaking
public policy
system analysis
advocacy
framing
obesity
policymaking
public policy
system analysis
Hagenaars, Luc L.
Schmidt, Laura A.
Groeniger, Joost Oude
Bekker, Marleen P.M.
ter Ellen, Fleur
de Leeuw, Evelyne
van Lenthe, Frank J.
Oude Hengel, Karen M.
Stronks, Karien
Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
description Despite evidence for the effectiveness of policies that target obesogenic environments, their adoption remains deficient. Using methods and concepts from complexity and political science (Stock-and-Flow analysis and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory) and a qualitative literature review, we developed system maps to identify feedback loops that hinder policymaking on mitigating obesogenic environments and feedback loops that could trigger and sustain policy change. We found numerous self-reinforcing feedback loops that buttress the assumption that obesity is an individual problem, strengthening the biomedical and commercial weight-loss sectors' claim to “ownership” over solutions. That is, improvements in therapies for individuals with obesity reinforces policymakers' reluctance to target obesogenic environments. Random events that focus attention on obesity (e.g., celebrities dismissing soda) could disrupt this cycle, when actors from outside the medical and weight-loss sector (e.g., anti-weight stigma activists) successfully reframe obesity as a societal problem, which requires robust and politically relevant engagement with affected communities prior to such events taking place. Sustained prioritization of policies targeting obesogenic environments requires shared problem ownership of affected communities and nonhealth government sectors, by emphasizing cobenefits of policies that target obesogenic environments (e.g., ultraprocessed food taxation for raising revenue) and solutions that are meaningful for affected communities.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet advocacy
framing
obesity
policymaking
public policy
system analysis
author Hagenaars, Luc L.
Schmidt, Laura A.
Groeniger, Joost Oude
Bekker, Marleen P.M.
ter Ellen, Fleur
de Leeuw, Evelyne
van Lenthe, Frank J.
Oude Hengel, Karen M.
Stronks, Karien
author_facet Hagenaars, Luc L.
Schmidt, Laura A.
Groeniger, Joost Oude
Bekker, Marleen P.M.
ter Ellen, Fleur
de Leeuw, Evelyne
van Lenthe, Frank J.
Oude Hengel, Karen M.
Stronks, Karien
author_sort Hagenaars, Luc L.
title Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
title_short Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
title_full Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
title_fullStr Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
title_full_unstemmed Why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : Lessons from the complexity and political sciences
title_sort why we struggle to make progress in obesity prevention and how we might overcome policy inertia : lessons from the complexity and political sciences
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-struggle-to-make-progress-in-obesity-prevention-and-how-we
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