Abstract
Addressing the global obesity crisis requires health systems that move beyond prevention to include care and treatment. However, translating global policy into national implementation remains challenging. Through the WHO Acceleration Plan to Stop Obesity, 34 countries committed to reducing the prevalence of obesity by 5% by 2030. Using the plan's operational model, we applied a policy and impact cycle and created a 100-day challenge platform, to support 12 countries to integrate and scale chronic obesity care within their health systems. This paper captures the approaches, system design, progress, and lessons in expanding access to chronic obesity care across the life course. Results show that political commitment, structured implementation, and targeted technical support enabled rapid progress in service design and delivery readiness. Stakeholder engagement, community participation, and data-driven planning emerged as key enablers of success. The countries in this study provide a blueprint for embedding obesity care at scale, underscoring the need for a coordinated global response.