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Featured researches published by Emmanuel Cohen.


BMC Public Health | 2015

The relevance of the side-view in body image scales for public health: an example from two African populations

Emmanuel Cohen; Amadou Ndao; Gilles Boëtsch; Lamine Gueye; Patrick Pasquet; Michelle Holdsworth; Alexandre Courtiol

BackgroundBody size scales are a common method for diagnosing body image disturbances and assessing the cultural valorisation of stoutness, a phenomenon that plays a role in the development of overweight, especially among African populations. Traditionally, body size scales present a front view. In this study, we evaluated a complementary model of representing body shape: the side view of body outlines. In particular, we examined the association between the side-view and a set of bio-anthropometric indices in men and women.MethodsTo cover the inter-ethnic variability in the Niger-Congo area, we selected a balanced sex-ratio sample of 80 Cameroonians and 81 Senegalese. Individuals wearing close-fitting clothes were photographed from the front-and side-view, and measured following a bio-anthropometric protocol synthesizing body shape variation: Body Mass Index, percentage body fat, somatotype profile, waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, mean blood pressure and glycaemia. The shape of each front and side body outline was extracted and characterised by Normalized Elliptic Fourier Descriptors (NEFD). Finally, we assessed associations between NEFD and bio-anthropometric indices.ResultsVariation in the shape of both front and side body outlines was associated with all bio-anthropometrics for at least one sex-population combination. Overall, the side view best captured body shape variation related to changes in almost all bio-anthropometrics in both sexes and populations, with the exceptions of female mesomorphy, male blood pressure and glycaemia (in both sexes). We found that the details of the relationship between bio-anthropometrics and body shape differed between the two male populations, a finding that was reflected in side-views for all criteria, but not front-views.ConclusionsVariation in body shape assessed by several bio-anthropometrics related to health and nutritional status was larger for side than front body outlines. Integrating side views in body size scales would improve the accuracy of body size assessment and thus, the assessment of behaviours leading to overweight, as well as symptoms of body image disturbances, in Africa and potentially in other populations.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Examining the relationships between body image, eating attitudes, BMI, and physical activity in rural and urban South African young adult females using structural equation modeling.

Alessandra Prioreschi; Stephanie Wrottesley; Emmanuel Cohen; Ankita Reddy; Rihlat Said-Mohamed; Rhian Twine; Stephen Tollman; Kathleen Kahn; David B. Dunger; Shane A. Norris

The persistence of food insecurity, malnutrition, increasing adiposity, and decreasing physical activity, heightens the need to understand relationships between body image satisfaction, eating attitudes, BMI and physical activity levels in South Africa. Females aged 18–23 years were recruited from rural (n = 509) and urban (n = 510) settings. Body image satisfaction was measured using Stunkard’s silhouettes, and the 26-item Eating Attitudes questionnaire (EAT-26) was used to evaluate participants’ risk of disordered eating. Minutes per week of moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) was assessed using the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQ). Significant linear correlates were included in a series of regressions run separately for urban and rural participants. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to test the relationships between variables. Urban females were more likely to be overweight and obese than rural females (p = 0.02), and had a greater desire to be thinner (p = 0.02). In both groups, being overweight or obese was positively associated with a desire to be thinner (p<0.01), and negatively associated with a desire to be fatter (p<0.01). Having a disordered eating attitude was associated with body image dissatisfaction in the urban group (β = 1.27, p<0.01, CI: 0.38; 2.16), but only with a desire to be fatter in the rural group (β = 0.63, p = 0.04, CI: 0.03; 1.23). In the SEM model, body image dissatisfaction was associated with disordered eating (β = 0.63), as well as higher MVPA participation (p<0.01). These factors were directly associated with a decreased risk of disordered eating attitude, and with a decreased desire to be thinner. Findings indicate a shift in both settings towards more Westernised ideals. Physical activity may provide a means to promote a healthy body image, while reducing the risk of disordered eating. Given the high prevalence of overweight and obesity in both rural and urban women, this study provides insights for future interventions aimed at decreasing adiposity in a healthy way.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2017

Nutrition Transition and Biocultural Determinants of Obesity among Cameroonian Migrants in Urban Cameroon and France.

Emmanuel Cohen; Norbert Amougou; Amandine Ponty; Juliette Loinger-Beck; Téodyl Nkuintchua; Nicolas Monteillet; Jonathan Y. Bernard; Rihlat Said-Mohamed; Michelle Holdsworth; Patrick Pasquet

Native of rural West Cameroon, the Bamiléké population is traditionally predisposed to obesity. Bamiléké who migrated to urban areas additionally experience the nutrition transition. We investigated the biocultural determinants of obesity in Bamiléké who migrated to urban Cameroon (Yaoundé), or urban France (Paris). We conducted qualitative interviews (n = 36; 18 men) and a quantitative survey (n = 627; 266 men) of adults using two-stage sampling strategy, to determine the association of dietary intake, physical activity and body weight norms with obesity of Bamiléké populations in these three socio-ecological areas (rural Cameroon: n = 258; urban Cameroon: n = 319; urban France: n = 50). The Bamiléké valued overweight and traditional energy-dense diets in rural and urban Cameroon. Physical activity levels were lower, consumption of processed energy-dense food was frequent and obesity levels higher in new migrants living in urban Cameroon and France. Female sex, age, duration of residence in urban areas, lower physical activity and valorisation of overweight were independently associated with obesity status. This work argues in favour of local and global health policies that account for the origin and the migration trajectories to prevent obesity in migrants.


Cardiovascular Journal of Africa | 2017

Prevalence of obesity and body size perceptions in urban and rural Senegal: new insight on the epidemiological transition in West Africa

Enguerran Macia; Emmanuel Cohen; Lamine Gueye; Gilles Boëtsch; Priscilla Duboz

Summary Background: The objectives of this study were to assess the prevalence of obesity in Dakar and in Tessekere, a rural municipality in northern Senegal, and to compare ideal body size between these populations. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was carried out in 2015 on a representative sample of 1 000 adults, aged 20 years and older in Dakar, and 500 adults of the same age in Tessekere. Results: The prevalence of obesity and overweight was higher in Dakar than in Tessekere. However, overweight and obesity rates of young women living in this rural area were close to those of young women in Dakar. At a body mass index of 27.5 kg/m², less than 40% of the men in Dakar and Tessekere found themselves too fat, compared to 50% of urban women and 30% of rural women. Conclusion: This study explains how and why obesity is becoming a rural health problem in Senegal.


Public Health Nutrition | 2017

Drivers of dietary behaviours in women living in urban Africa: a systematic mapping review

Stefanie C Gissing; Rebecca Pradeilles; Hibbah Araba Osei-Kwasi; Emmanuel Cohen; Michelle Holdsworth

OBJECTIVE To (i) systematically review the literature to determine the factors influencing diet and dietary behaviour in women living in urban Africa; (ii) present these in a visual map; and (iii) utilize this to identify potentially important areas for future research. DESIGN Systematic mapping review. The review protocol was registered at PROSPERO (http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/; registration number CRD42015017749). Six databases were systematically searched, followed by reference and citation searching. Eligibility criteria included women aged 18-70 years living in urban Africa, any design/methodology, exploring any driver, using any measure of dietary behaviour. Quality appraisal occurred parallel with data extraction. Twelve predominantly cross-sectional quantitative studies were included; reported in seventeen publications. Determinants were synthesized narratively and compiled into a map adapted from an existing ecological model based on research in high-income countries. SETTING Urban Africa. SUBJECTS African women aged 18-70 years. RESULTS Determinants significantly associated with unhealthy dietary behaviour ranged from the individual to macro level, comprising negative body image perception, perceptions of insufficient food quantity and poorer quality, poorer food knowledge, skipping meals, snacking less, higher alcohol consumption, unhealthy overall lifestyle, older age, higher socio-economic status, having an education, lower household food expenditure, frequent eating outside the home and media influence. Marital status and strong cultural and religious beliefs were also identified as possible determinants. CONCLUSIONS Few studies have investigated drivers of dietary behaviours in urban African settings. Predominantly individual-level factors were reported. Gaps in the literature identified a need for research into the neglected areas: social, physical and macro-level drivers of food choice.


Ethnicity & Disease | 2011

Development of a new body image assessment scale in urban Cameroon: an anthropological approach.

Emmanuel Cohen; Patrick Pasquet


Archive | 2009

L'image du corps chez les Sénégalais : Application à l'étude de l'obésité dans le contexte de la transition des modes de vie

Emmanuel Cohen; Nicole Chapuis-Lucciani; Patrick Pasquet; Gueye Lamine; Gilles Boëtsch


Journal of Biosocial Science | 2018

Biocultural determinants of overweight and obesity in the context of nutrition transition in Senegal: a holistic anthropological approach

Emmanuel Cohen; Philippe Jean-Luc Gradidge; Amadou Ndao; Priscilla Duboz; Enguerran Macia; Lamine Gueye; Gilles Boëtsch; Patrick Pasquet; Michelle Holdsworth; Nicole Chapuis-Lucciani


Corps | 2018

Acculturation, mutation des pratiques sexuelles et nouveaux regards sur la beauté en Afrique : le cas du Sénégal, du Cameroun et du Burkina Faso

Emmanuel Cohen; Amadou Ndao; Gilles Boëtsch


Archive | 2015

La perception gustative et l'obésité

Claude Marcel Hladik; Emmanuel Cohen; Patrick Pasquet

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Patrick Pasquet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Amadou Ndao

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lamine Gueye

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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Nicole Chapuis-Lucciani

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gilles Boëtsch

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Rihlat Said-Mohamed

University of the Witwatersrand

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Enguerran Macia

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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Priscilla Duboz

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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