Darnton-Hill Ian, Samman Samir
The Boden Institute of Obesity, Nutrition, Exercise & Eating Disorders, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, Boston, MA 021111, USA.
Healthcare (Basel). 2015 Jan 9;3(1):3-19. doi: 10.3390/healthcare3010003.
Healthcare continues to be in a state of flux; conventionally, this provides opportunities and challenges. The opportunities include technological breakthroughs, improved economies and increasing availability of healthcare. On the other hand, economic disparities are increasing and leading to differing accessibility to healthcare, including within affluent countries. Nutrition has received an increase in attention and resources in recent decades, a lot of it stimulated by the rise in obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and hypertension. An increase in ageing populations also has meant increased interest in nutrition-related chronic diseases. In many middle-income countries, there has been an increase in the double burden of malnutrition with undernourished children and overweight/obese parents and adolescents. In low-income countries, an increased evidence base has allowed scaling-up of interventions to address under-nutrition, both nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions. Immediate barriers (institutional, structural and biological) and longer-term barriers (staffing shortages where most needed and environmental impacts on health) are discussed. Significant barriers remain for the near universal access to healthcare, especially for those who are socio-economically disadvantaged, geographically isolated, living in war zones or where environmental damage has taken place. However, these barriers are increasingly being recognized, and efforts are being made to address them. The paper aims to take a broad view that identifies and then comments on the many social, political and scientific factors affecting the achievement of improved nutrition through healthcare.
医疗保健仍处于不断变化的状态;传统上,这既带来机遇也带来挑战。机遇包括技术突破、经济改善以及医疗保健可及性的提高。另一方面,经济差距正在加大,导致医疗保健的可及性存在差异,包括在富裕国家内部。近几十年来,营养受到了更多关注并获得了更多资源,其中很大一部分是由肥胖症、2型糖尿病和高血压的增加所推动的。人口老龄化加剧也意味着对营养相关慢性病的兴趣增加。在许多中等收入国家,营养不良的双重负担有所增加,即儿童营养不良,而父母和青少年超重/肥胖。在低收入国家,越来越多的证据支持扩大干预措施以解决营养不良问题,包括特定营养干预措施和对营养敏感的干预措施。文中讨论了直接障碍(机构、结构和生物方面的)以及长期障碍(最需要的地方人员短缺以及环境对健康的影响)。实现近乎普遍的医疗保健仍存在重大障碍,特别是对于那些社会经济地位不利、地理位置偏远、生活在战区或遭受环境破坏地区的人。然而,这些障碍越来越受到重视,并且正在努力解决这些问题。本文旨在从广泛的视角识别并评论影响通过医疗保健实现改善营养的诸多社会、政治和科学因素。