Australasian Leisure Management
Jan 29, 2016

Childhood obesity rates to soar without urgent government intervention

Disturbing new figures released by the World Health Organisation (WHO) have revealed that the global rates of childhood obesity could rise from 41 million children affected to 70 million in the next decade unless governments take urgent intervention action.

The report commissioned by the WHO, Ending Childhood Obesity, said the alarming rates are in part the cause of unhealthy food and beverage marketing saturating children’s environments and a decrease in physical activity.

Echoing long-held National Heart Foundation demands, the report recommends government promote healthy diets by means of “effective taxation on sugar-sweetened beverages and curbing the marketing of unhealthy foods”.

National Heart Foundation Chief Executive Professor Garry Jennings said the shocking findings should undoubtedly increase the pressure on government to act now and issue its own strategy for tackling obesity in Australia.

Professor Jennings stated “Governments are failing in their obligation to help provide the healthy start to life every child deserves.

“While we cannot ignore the global nature of the childhood obesity epidemic, tackling the problem must begin in our own backyard.”

“For the first time in history, the number of Australian children aged five to 17 years old classified as either overweight or obese exceeded 1 million in 2014/15

“The Australian Government has a real opportunity to be a leader in curbing this global epidemic by implementing local strategies that have real impact, but instead it continues to shy away from the problem all together.

“We have been face-to-face with the reality of the problem for a long time and no-one can deny that action is needed – and needed now.

“Preventing weight gain in our younger generations today by encouraging parents and children to make healthy food choices and move more and sit less is fundamental to our collective health tomorrow.”

Professor Jennings emphasises that there is no single intervention that will halt the childhood obesity epidemic, instead cooperation on both a local and global level is the key.

He believes that it is important that Governments engage constructively with the entities that directly or indirectly contribute to the childhood obesity epidemic, such as the food and beverage industry, retailers, and other governments, to encourage the implementation of policies designed specifically to tackle this mounting problem.

The Heart Foundation continues to call on the Government to develop and implement a comprehensive national obesity prevention strategy and National Physical Activity Action Plan as measures to curb Australia’s growing obesity crisis.

The Heart Foundation’s recommendations for a comprehensive national obesity prevention strategy include:

• Exploring a ‘health levy’ on sugar sweetened beverages 
• Opposing the marketing of junk food to children on social media and outlawing advertising of these products during TV programs popular with children, including sports broadcasts 
• Renewing and strengthening the national food reformulation program to reduce excessive sugar, fat and salts in processed food. 
• Moving as quickly as possible to make the new health food stars rating system compulsory for packaged food products

Click here to view Ending Childhood Obesity.

25th January 2016 - AUSTRALIAN WORKERS’ INACTIVITY MAKES PHYSICAL ACTIVITY PLAN A MUST

28th December 2015 - PARENTS CONCERNED OVER CHILDREN’S EXCESSIVE SCREEN TIME

18th November 2015 - NEW ZEALAND SPORT STARS RALLY TO FIGHT OBESITY

10th October 2015 - RISE IN OBESITY HITS UNITED NATIONS GOALS ON DIET-RELATED DISEASES

17th August 2015 - COCA-COLA BACKED RESEARCH FINDS PHYSICAL INACTIVITY A ‘MAJOR PREDICTOR OF CHILDHOOD OBESITY’

18th July 2015 - SELLERS OF SPORTS DRINKS MAY SOON BE ABLE TO ADD ‘MISLEADING’ HEALTH CLAIMS

15th May 2015 - FAST FOOD LABELLING CHANGES FOOD PURCHASING BEHAVIOURS IN YOUNG PEOPLE

24th April 2015 - AUSTRALIA RANKED AMONG WORLD’S WORST FOR STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY

27th August 2014 - STUDY SHOWS DRINKS CHILDREN ASSOCIATE WITH SPORT ARE LARGELY UNHEALTHY

Australasian Leisure Management Magazine
Subscribe to the Magazine Today

Published since 1997 - Australasian Leisure Management Magazine is your go-to resource for sports, recreation, and tourism. Enjoy exclusive insights, expert analysis, and the latest trends.

Mailed to you six times a year, for an annual subscription from just $99.

New Issue
Australasian Leisure Management
Online Newsletter

Get business and operations news for $12 a month - plus headlines emailed twice a week. Covering aquatics, attractions, entertainment, events, fitness, parks, recreation, sport, tourism, and venues.