Targeting the first 2,000 days of life with integrated strategies can significantly reduce childhood obesity, addressing a global problem with integrated, multi-behavioral solutions.
Study: Early life factors influencing obesity and the need for complex solutions. Image credit: Lemonsoup14 / Shutterstock
In a recent review published in the journal Nature Reviews Endocrinology, The researchers gathered data from more than 175 publications to elucidate the effects of early life factors on the subsequent development of obesity.
The review focuses on evidence from biological, sociocultural, environmental and individual system levels and reveals that the first 2,000 days after conception play an important role in altering future obesity risk.
Importantly, the review highlights that these factors interact in complex ways, creating a “web of influences” that varies across socioeconomic and ethnic groups, making it necessary to tailor prevention efforts to specific populations.
The review’s findings highlight that encouraging obesity-risk-mitigating habits in children before obesity-risk behaviors are established (during adolescence and adulthood) will significantly alleviate the ongoing global epidemic of overweight.
However, traditional interventions that target behaviors in isolation have proven ineffective, particularly in disadvantaged communities.
Evidence suggests that more integrated multi-level strategies are needed to address the combined effects of individual, family, social and environmental factors.
Furthermore, conventional interventions against poor health decisions, which historically attempt to address behaviors in isolation, may not be sufficient, as evidence suggests that comprehensive, multidisciplinary, and complex multi-behavioral strategies are needed to effectively manage unwanted weight gain.
What is obesity and why should we be concerned?
Obesity is a chronic condition characterized by excess body weight (body mass index ≥ 30 kg/m2) due to abnormal fat retention.
Although independently unhealthy, obesity is associated with an increased risk of several life-threatening comorbidities, including type 2 diabetes (T2D), cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), reproductive complications, and even several cancers, underscoring the need for prevention or effective treatment of the condition. .
Alarmingly, despite decades of research and several nationally promoted public health initiatives against obesity, the prevalence of the disease continues to rise.
Global prevalence rates have more than doubled since 1990, with more than 2.5 billion adults overweight or obese by 2022.
It is worth noting that obesity is not evenly distributed among populations. Children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, indigenous groups, and certain ethnic minorities—such as Hispanic and Polynesian communities—are disproportionately affected, often due to factors such as reduced access to healthy food, safe spaces for physical activity, and health care resources.
Why should we focus on childhood obesity?
Historical observations have noted an age-related trend in obesity risk. Children and adolescents were considered to be at minimal risk, which increased through adulthood until ∼75 years and then decreased or slightly decreased thereafter.
More recent research has highlighted the importance of the womb and early development as critical periods that profoundly influence the manifestations of chronic diseases later in life.
The developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) theory incorporates this hypothesis and emphasizes the importance of the first 1,000 days after conception as imperative for managing chronic disease risk.
However, the current review extends this focus to the first 2,000 days, highlighting that the complexity of obesity development extends into early childhood as lifestyle habits, such as diet and physical activity, become established.
Research by the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Bank suggests that monitoring and intervention in the first five years of life is imperative – more than 37 million children <5 suffer today from childhood obesity.
Given the pathology of the disease, children with obesity will live with the condition for the rest of their lives. In addition, habits and behaviors learned during the early years of life can significantly alter the risk of adult obesity.
Accordingly, the present and other recent obesity reviews suggest that the focus of DOHaD extends to the first 2,000 days after conception (conception at ∼5 years).
The genesis and complexity of early obesity
Obesity results from the complex interplay between numerous individual and biological influences (eg, genetics), behaviors (eg, eating and sleeping habits), and sociocultural factors.
In infants and newborns, the risk of obesity may also be modified by factors such as breastfeeding, maternal health, and maternal behaviors during pregnancy (eg, smoking).
The socioecological model used in the review identifies three main levels of influence—individual and biological, sociocultural, and environmental/systemic factors.
Importantly, these layers do not operate independently. Rather, they create a network of interactions that shape a child’s obesity risk. For example, parental feeding practices and family eating habits interact with broader social influences, such as food marketing and access to physical activity spaces, contributing to the development of obesity.
“Based on the socioecological model, the factors associated with early obesity can be divided into three groups: individual and biological, sociocultural, and environmental and systemic levels. It is important to note that many of these influences affect not only weight status but also other influences identified, creating a complex network of interactions. studies that assess body composition”.
So what can we do about it?
This review proposes guidelines for the prevention of obesity at four developmental stages.
During the first stage (in utero – conception to birth), maternal nutrition, weight gain (including obesity control) and health behaviors (smoking, drinking) should be monitored to ensure optimal placental development and minimize the risk of pregnancy-related complications.
The second stage (infancy – birth to 12 months) is characterized by nutritional factors, health behaviors and development of motor skills.
Parents should be trained to identify and address hunger in their infants. Mothers should breastfeed their infants even after solid foods are introduced (~6 months after birth).
Adequate sleep and daily routines should be slowly established and taught to infants (and reinforced as they move through childhood and adolescence), especially since poor health habits, once established, are difficult to break.
Crucially, the review advocates ‘joint action’, where multiple sectors (eg health care, education, urban planning) work together to create environments conducive to healthy lifestyles. For example, policies that promote green spaces and walkable neighborhoods can support active play for toddlers, while food system reforms can ensure better access to nutritious options.
During the third stage (toddler – one to three years), parents are encouraged to provide ample opportunities for active play (including outdoor activities), enhancing their toddlers’ fitness and motor skill development.
Once toddlers have a basic understanding of food and begin to develop food preferences, they should be involved in meal preparation and planning while being taught the pros and cons of healthy food choices. In particular, added sugars should be minimized both to prevent obesity and to instill a lifelong aversion to excessive sugar intake.
Finally, during the fourth (preschool age – three to five years), children should be encouraged to participate in skill-related physical activities, including sports and dance. Their eating habits should be monitored, regulated and optimized for their healthy childhood development.
Active lifestyles should be promoted, while excessive screen time should be limited. BMI and other measures of obesity should be monitored to prevent fat regain and reduce the risk of obesity. If present, steps to reverse obesity indicators should be implemented before it fully manifests.
It is important to note that the review calls for tailored strategies that take into account the different needs of communities based on their socio-economic and cultural context.
There is no ‘one size fits all’ solution to childhood obesity and interventions need to be flexible and adaptable to these different settings.
conclusions
This review brings together available data on the prevalence, risk correlates and mitigation measures against childhood obesity, a chronic condition estimated to affect more than 37 million children worldwide.
The review highlights the critical need for complex, multi-level interventions that address not only individual behaviors but also the broader socioeconomic and environmental systems that shape them.
Additional research on risk factors, particularly among different ethnicities, is needed before a standardized childhood action plan can be developed and publicized.
Such solutions must involve multi-sectoral collaboration, ensuring that health care, education and urban planning systems work together to create environments that support health from early childhood onwards.
Meanwhile, the review details routine guidelines and simple guidelines that can be followed during the first five years of babies’ lives to minimize their risk of obesity, both in childhood and throughout life.