An article published in Melbourne newspaper The Age
Jill Stark
February 12, 2007
Australia’s obesity epidemic is reaching crisis point and the number of overweight children will rise to 60 per cent within 30 years unless the Government invests billions, according to a health expert.
Kevin Norton, professor of exercise science at Sport Knowledge Australia, accused state and federal governments of failing to stem rising obesity rates, which could cripple the national health system.
In the first study to look at the weight of Australian children over the last century, researchers found that obesity rates jumped from 4 per cent in 1901 to more than 30 per cent in 2003.
The study found that in 30 years’ time the number of overweight or obese children will double, matching the current rate of adult obesity.
Professor Norton likened the seriousness of the problem to that of climate change and said failure to act now could have devastating consequences.
“We are going to need new money - in the same way we’ve done with the climate change issue - for interventions to tackle the problem,” he said. “If we’re going to have an impact we’ll need hundreds of millions, if not billions … because we’re running out of money and the health-care costs can’t continue.”
The report, published in the International Journal of Pediatric Obesity, took in data from 41 studies since 1901 that weighed 500,000 Australian children aged five to 15.
The figures reveal a low, steady rate of obesity until the 1970s when the rate increased.
Professor Norton said the spike coincided with a decline in physical education in schools, and called for compulsory classes from year 1 to year 12.
“It’s got to be put in the same bracket as maths and English and reading and writing skills. If we do national testing for that surely we should educate our kids about their health through physical activity and nutrition programs in schools,” he said.
“Last year’s estimates of direct financial costs placed the obesity epidemic throughout Australia at somewhere around $3.5 billion.”
The Age revealed last year that Australia has the fastest growing rate of childhood obesity in the world.
Professor Norton described recent Government prevention measures - such as a ban on soft drinks in Victorian state schools - as little more than “tinkering”.
Professor Norton said policies such as adding half a cent per litre to the price of petrol could generate enough money to put one physical education teacher into every school in Australia for a year.
*****
Not sure I want to pay MORE for petrol Professor, but if we could be sure they’d spend it on PE teachers, then I would …
I reckon there’s more we can do without waiting for government: for instance, what if primary/elementary school teachers and parents cooperated to give lower homework levels (which are ridiculously high for children and largely achieve nothing but stress anyway) in the Summer/Daylight-Savings months and to send kids outside to play (no computer, no TV, no Gameboy)?
Sorry, crazy idea…


8 responses so far ↓
Lynne Eldridge M.D. // Mar 22, 2007 at 8:34 am
The statitics on the childhood obesity epidemic are terrifying to me. Already, 20 percent of cancer deaths in women in the U.S. are due to obesity. With tobacco use declining, this will soon be the number one preventable cause of cancer death.
One place we need to start, is by looking at the adults! In the U.S., 78.2 percent of men aged 40 to 59 are overweight or obese. What are we teaching our children? Thanks!
Lynne Eldridge M.D.
Author, “Avoiding Cancer One Day At A Time”
http://www.avoidcancernow.com
Pete // Mar 22, 2007 at 8:45 am
Always the best place to start … and here I am with my “spare tyre” pressing up against the desk preaching health and fitness. Funny how we tend to outsource our anxieties: hire more PE teachers, where’s Government when you need em, etc etc. - when we can do something today that makes a difference.
Thanks Lynne!
[It's time to hit the walking track Pete.]
Markk // Mar 22, 2007 at 9:39 am
When you think about it, what with the exercise and diet habits in Western countries, the astonishing thing is not that there is so much obesity, but that there are any skinny people left.
themolk // Mar 22, 2007 at 2:20 pm
“Mmm… no beer and no TV make Homer something something…”
Pete // Mar 22, 2007 at 3:48 pm
That would probably make Homer smarter & thinner, wouldn’t it?
themolk // Mar 23, 2007 at 1:08 pm
“… go crazy?! Don’t mind if I do!!!”
I think the childhood obesity problem is simply solved: Stop having a childhood (I think society has just about managed that for us). Just move kids from tots to teens and let them sort themselves out. That way, the parents can be the ‘victims’ of their children making their own decisions.
Now, onto solving world poverty…
Pete // Mar 23, 2007 at 2:33 pm
Heh heh, shouldn’t be a problem for you Steve! If only you had the time to solve it - what with a new baby and all.
Feed me, Seymour - FEED ME! | Freaked-Out Fathers // Apr 19, 2007 at 3:25 pm
[...] it’s not going to be a rant about childhood obesity. Yes, the word prosaic is somewhat pretentious, as is the word [...]
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