@misc{10481/61236, year = {2019}, month = {5}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10481/61236}, abstract = {Obesity is a pandemic that has increased exponentially during the past decades due in large part to recent changes in lifestyle and food delivery systems. Yet, there is still a great variability in the burden of obesity across ancestral populations. For example, in the USA prevalence estimates of adult obesity vary from 13 to 48% in Asian Americans and African Americans.1 Such variable observations within the same obesogenic environment have motivated a wide array of inquiry into the genetic, epigenetic and social determinants of obesity, and their complex interactions with modern lifestyles and food systems.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, keywords = {Obesity}, keywords = {Climate}, title = {Obesity and climate adaptation}, doi = {10.1093/emph/eoz016}, author = {Salazar Tortosa, Diego Francisco and Fernández-Rhodes, Lindsay}, }