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Global Efforts On Obesity ‘Unacceptably Slow’, study says
Global Efforts On Obesity 'Unacceptably Slow', study says

Global Efforts On Obesity ‘Unacceptably Slow’, study says

Global progress towards tackling obesity has been “unacceptably slow,” with only one in four countries implementing a policy on healthy eating up to 2010, according to a major new research.

New estimates published in The Lancet medical journal suggest that children in the US are consuming 200 more calories a day than they were in the 1970s.

They also weigh five kilograms (11lbs) more than they did 30 years ago.

The extra eating was said to bring in $20bn a year to the US food industry, illustrating the difficult conflict between health and economic priorities.

A series of papers in The Lancet highlighting the problem of obesity and what needs to be done to overcome it points an accusing finger at food companies.

The authors claimed that the food industry has a “special interest” in targeting children.

Repeated exposure to processed foods and sweetened drinks during infancy built taste preferences, brand loyalty and high profits, they claimed.

This year the global market for processed infant foods was likely to be worth $19bn compared with $13.7bn in 2007.

Yet, few countries had taken regulatory steps to protect children from the harmful effects of obesity or implemented widely-recommended healthy food policies.

Most had relied solely on voluntary moves by the food industry, with no evidence of their effectiveness, said the authors.

Dr Christina Roberto, one of the researchers from the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health in the US, said: “Our understanding of obesity must be completely reframed if we are to halt and reverse the global obesity epidemic.

“On one hand, we need to acknowledge that individuals bear some responsibility for their health, and on the other hand recognise that today’s food environments exploit people’s biological (eg, innate preference for sweetened foods), psychological (eg, marketing techniques), and social and economic (eg, convenience and cost) vulnerabilities, making it easier for them to eat unhealthy foods.

“It’s time to realise that this vicious cycle of supply and demand for unhealthy foods can be broken with ’smart food policies’ by governments alongside joint efforts from industry and civil society to create healthier food systems.”

Agencies/Canadajournal




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