What happened More than 225 million children could be obese by 2040 unless drastic steps are taken globally, an international report has warned. Last year about 180 million children around the world were classed as obese, but new data from the World Obesity Federation suggests that within the next 14 years, about 227 million of all five- to 19-year-olds will fall into that health category.
Who said what It’s wrong to “condemn a generation to obesity and the chronic and potentially fatal non-communicable diseases that often go with it”, said World Obesity Federation chief executive Johanna Ralston.
Experts have welcomed the report, noted The Guardian. Dr Kremlin Wickramasinghe, regional adviser for nutrition, physical activity and obesity at the World Health Organization, Europe, said childhood obesity was a “failure of environments”. Childhood obesity is “not inevitable”, said Katharine Jenner, executive director of the Obesity Health Alliance.
What next? The report is demanding changes, and warns: “Without urgent action, rising obesity rates will place a growing strain on health systems, communities and future generations.” Wickramasinghe has called for mandatory, rather than voluntary, marketing restrictions or front-of-pack labelling. |