“Overweight Trends among Polish Schoolchildren Before and After the Transition from Communism to Capitalism”, Aleksandra Gomula, Natalia Nowak-Szczepanska, Dariusz P. Danel, Slawomir Koziel2015-12-01 (; similar)⁠:

This study aims to reveal the secular trends in body mass index (BMI) and the prevalence of overweight and obesity among Polish schoolchildren between the years 196646201212ya, during which intense socio-political changes took place.

Four surveys were conducted in several districts of Poland looking at 69,746 schoolchildren aged 7–18.

Significant increase in mean BMI as well as in the prevalence of overweight and obesity was observed. During this time the highest increase in both mean BMI and excess weight was observed between 1988 and 2012, i.e. after the political transformation, resulting in the improvement of living conditions. However, with respect to girls in late adolescence, between these years, the mean BMI as well as the prevalence of overweight were leveling off, while the percentage of boys with excess body fat in the same developmental category statistically-significantly increased in 2012. In the years 196612197846ya and 197810198836ya the pattern of changes in the prevalence of overweight and obesity reflected the social and economic circumstances, i.e. temporary economic improvements, or deepening political crises and food shortage.

In conclusion, the weight status of schoolchildren strongly reflects socio-political changes that took place in Poland, as well as in most of the Central European countries in the last half century.

[Keywords: overweight, obesity, secular trend, political transition, Westernization]