Purpose of review Obesity is a growing public health issue worldwide affecting one in three adults in Australia and two in five adults in the United States. Globally, the prevalence of obesity has doubled or even tripled in many countries over the past two decades, predominately driven by urbanization, sedentary lifestyles and increased consumption of high-calorie processed foods. The aim of this viewpoint article is to highlight recent policy changes and public health Initiatives to curb this obesity epidemic. Recent findings Traditional strategies that focus on individual behaviour have proven insufficient and broader public health policy models to address both societal and environmental contributors to obesity have emerged. Recent public health initiatives directed their focus on promoting healthier lifestyles through policies, family-based interventions, dietary education and sustained community support. Effective obesity prevention requires collaborative efforts across policy, healthcare and community sectors to mitigate its far-reaching physical, psychological and economic impacts from individual to population levels. Summary Policy and public health efforts against obesity are evolving into comprehensive systems-oriented models. They combine regulation, fiscal tools, healthcare integration, education campaigns, measurement systems and equity-focused approaches. Together, they form a layered strategy aimed at preventing obesity, supporting individuals living with it and ensuring accountability across sectors.
Chan et al. (Tue,) studied this question.