Substantial effort has been devoted to explaining secular trends in childhood obesity and metabolic risks to unhealthy diet and physical activity. While some studies have suggested these factors may play a role in the obesity epidemic, even these studies have only been able to conclude that these factors have a moderate role. Given that a single-generation transformation in the human genome is even more unlikely to have transformed susceptibility to excess weight gain in early life, we are left with the reality that environmental influences represent important risks for obesity and dysmetabolism. In contrast to diet and physical activity, which can require intensive attention, effort and costs to modify through behavioral and other interventions, government action can fundamentally transform the environment and prevent disease and disability. The costs of regulations to limit environmental obesogens can also be much lower than the benefits to society.
CITATION STYLE
Trasande, L., & Blumberg, B. (2018). Endocrine disruptors as obesogens. In Contemporary Endocrinology (pp. 243–253). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-68192-4_14
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