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Obesity and the experienced cultural, economic, and climate variations among immigrants to high-income countries: An umbrella review of the literature - PubMed

2 hours ago
  • #Acculturation
  • #Obesity Determinants
  • #Immigrant Health
  • #Public Health Strategies
  • #Climate Impact
  • #Socioeconomic Factors
  • Obesity among immigrants in high-income countries is influenced by multiple intersecting factors including cultural, socioeconomic, environmental, and physiological changes.
  • Longer duration of residence and higher acculturation levels are consistently linked to increased obesity risk, with acculturation stress, food insecurity, and socioeconomic disadvantage acting as key mediators.
  • Colder and less sunny climates indirectly promote weight gain by limiting physical activity and access to traditional healthy diets, while cultural dietary transitions and intergenerational differences shape obesity trajectories.
  • Methodological quality of existing reviews varies, with only a limited number providing high-quality meta-analyses; future research should focus on longitudinal, intersectional, and climate-tailored studies to inform interventions.
  • Public health strategies need culturally sensitive approaches that address structural barriers and support healthy post-migration transitions.