Novo Nordisk launches new initiative to prevent childhood obesity in disadvantaged urban communities
08 October 2024 - 7:00PM
UK Regulatory
Novo Nordisk launches new initiative to prevent childhood obesity
in disadvantaged urban communities
- The initiative will launch in six cities across five
continents
- Interventions aim to increase physical activity and healthy
eating among children
- The three-year initiative comes with an investment of more than
250 million Danish kroner
Bagsværd, Denmark, 8 October 2024 – Novo
Nordisk today announced a new global initiative to prevent obesity
in children. The Childhood Obesity Prevention Initiative aims to
accelerate the prevention of childhood obesity in disadvantaged
urban communities globally. Together with a coalition of partners
such as city governments, academic institutions and non-profit
organisations, the initiative will support six cities in designing,
implementing and evaluating tailored solutions focused on physical
activity and healthy eating.
The initiative is founded on a robust evidence-based framework
to measure and evaluate the impact of the interventions. In the
project, changes in health behaviour and well-being, including
health-related quality of life and body mass index (BMI) will be
measured in children aged 6-13 at baseline and with follow-ups one
and two years after the intervention, respectively. It has a
controlled study design and will include a target population
receiving the intervention compared to a control group in each
city. The aim is to collect data from approximately 1,000 children
in each group.
“Childhood obesity is rising at alarming rates all over
the world, putting the health and well-being of this and future
generations at risk. With a focus on disadvantaged urban
communities, the Childhood Obesity Prevention Initiative will
provide important evidence and a unique data-led framework to
support city leaders in preventing childhood obesity”, says Katrine
DiBona, Global Head of Sustainability & Public Affairs at Novo
Nordisk.
The initiative builds on over a decade of experience in
city-based prevention programmes through Cities for Better Health
and will be rolled out in an initial set of six cities across
Brazil, Canada, France, Japan, South Africa and Spain.
About childhood obesity
In 2022 more than 390 million children aged 5–19 years were
affected by overweight worldwide, including 160 million who were
living with obesity. This puts them at risk of
developing early onset of type 2 diabetes and is a strong
predictor of adult obesity1. Children from lower
socioeconomic communities tend to have an increased risk of
obesity2.
About Childhood Obesity Prevention Initiative
(COPI)
In the project, global partners, Delivery Associates and
Behavioural Insights Team (BIT) will support the design and
delivery of the interventions and evaluation in collaboration with
a coalition of cross-sector local partners such as city
governments, academic institutions and non-profit organisations.
After 24 months, the impact is measured through a robust monitoring
and evaluation framework. The learning generated will be used as
guidance to city and community leaders worldwide on how to design,
implement, measure and sustain effective interventions. The
initiative is part of Novo Nordisk’s social responsibility efforts
to address obesity holistically as a serious chronic disease.
About Cities for Better Health
The initiative is part of Cities for Better Health, a global
public-private partnership committed to accelerating change in
urban health across generations by building impactful local
partnerships to drive health promotion and prevention. The
partnership, formerly called Cities Changing Diabetes, takes a
holistic approach to drive impactful community-based action to
promote healthy food consumption and physical activity among
children and vulnerable communities. Today, more than 50
cities and 300 partners are collaborating through the programme.
Read more here.
Novo Nordisk is a leading global healthcare company, founded
in 1923 and headquartered in Denmark. Our purpose is to drive
change to defeat serious chronic diseases, built upon our heritage
in diabetes. We do so by pioneering scientific breakthroughs,
expanding access to our medicines, and working to prevent and
ultimately cure disease. Novo Nordisk employs about 69,000 people
in 80 countries and markets its products in around 170 countries.
For more information, visit novonordisk.com,
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X, LinkedIn and
YouTube.
Contacts for further information
Media: |
|
Ambre
James-Brown
+45 3079 9289
abmo@novonordisk.com
|
Liz
Skrbkova (US)
+1 609 917 0632
lzsk@novonordisk.com
|
Investors: |
|
Jacob
Martin Wiborg Rode
+45 3075 5956
jrde@novonordisk.com
|
David
Heiberg Landsted
+45 3077 6915
dhel@novonordisk.com
|
Sina
Meyer
+45 3079 6656 azey@novonordisk.com
|
Ida
Schaap Melvold
+45 3077 5649
idmg@novonordisk.com
|
Frederik
Taylor Pitter
+1 609 613 0568
fptr@novonordisk.com
|
|
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References
- World Health Organization. Obesity
and Overweight. [Online] World Health Organization. Available
at: Obesity and overweight (who.int)
- World Health Organization. The
inequality epidemic: low-income teens face higher risks of obesity,
inactivity and poor diet. [Online] World Health Organization.
Available at: The inequality epidemic: low-income teens face
higher risks of obesity, inactivity and poor diet (who.int)
NHS England. National Child Measurement Programme, England,
2021/22 school year. [Online] NHS England. Available at: National
Child Measurement Programme, England, 2021/22 school year - NHS
England Digital
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PR241008-Preventing-childhood-obesity-in-disadvantaged-urban-communities
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