APPENDIX 28
Memorandum by UK Public Health Association
and Faculty of Public Health Medicine (OB 49)
The UKPHA is an independent, UK-wide voluntary
organisation which brings together individuals and organisations
from all sectors who share a common commitment to promoting the
public's health.
The UKPHA has three priority objectives: Combating
health inequalities. Promoting Sustainable Development and Challenging
Anti-health forces.
The Faculty of Public Health Medicine of the
Royal College of Physicians aims:
(1) To promote, for the public benefit,
the advancement of knowledge in the field of public health.
(2) To develop public health with a view
to maintaining the highest possible standards of professional
competence and practice, and to act as an authoritative body for
consultation in matters of education or public interest concerning
Public Health.
The form of this submission is to follow through
the questions posed by the Committee in the pursuit of its Inquiry.
The UKPHA and FPHM in their submission to the Inquiry will attempt
to address each of the points set out in the covering brief and
is prepared to make other forms of submission to the Inquiry and
supply supplementary evidence, as requested.
THE HEALTH
IMPLICATIONS OF
OBESITY
What are the health outcomes of obesity in society?
What are the economic and social costs? What efforts is the Government
making to evaluate these?
1. Obesity is an excess of body fat frequently
resulting in a significant impairment of health and longevity.
For adults levels of overweight and obesity are generally established
through the calculation of body mass index:
BMI = Body weight in Kg/(Height in m)2
An overweight adult is usually defined as one
with a BMI between 25 and 29.9, while an obese adult has a BMI
of 30 or higher. It is useful to determine of a gradient body
weight, from low to high, together with associated health risks.

3. The WHO projects that, by 2020, chronic
diseases will account for almost three-quarters of all deaths
globally, and that 71% of deaths due to ischaemic heart disease,
75% of deaths due to stroke[116]
There is a strong association between the prevalence of obesity
and CVD risk factors. American evidence suggests that the prevalence
of reported diabetes is 2.9 times higher in overweight than non-overweight
persons. According to WHO 58% of diabetes mellitus, 21% of ischaemic
heart disease and between 8-42% of certain cancers were attributable
to BMI greater than 21kg/m2. WHO currently attributes one-third
of all global deaths (15.3 million) to CVD, with developing countries,
low-income and middle-income countries accounting for 86% of the
DALYs attributable to CVD lost worldwide in 1998. Nevertheless,
the full economic and social picture of nutrition-related and
physical activity linked disease is by no means complete, although
for the UK the National Audit Office's 2001 review (in England)[117]
is a firm starting place. To develop a national picture of the
issues, including the means to tackle them, it is important that
further research is undertaken on a collaborative basis supported
by the Departments of Health, the Treasury (perhaps incorporating
in the current Treasury Review), specialist charities and researchers
in the public health community. A Public Health Research Collaboration
is one such model. This activity requires a major reorientation
of research and development activity by national research bodies
and the NHS to upstream factors and alternative policy pathways,
as for example, the Fully Engaged Strategy as set out in Securing
our Future Health (Wanless Report)[118]
4. What must be stated firmly is that preventing
obesity and overweight requires a "whole society approach";
it is not simply, or even primarily, a medical matter, although
the NHS can be helpful in dealing with a range of dietary or lifestyle
problems and can assist with the diseases associated with obesity
and overweight.
RECOMMENDATION
Effective surveillance systems for
diet, physical activity and related health problems are essential
to enable all interested stakeholders to track progress towards
health targets, including health inequalities targets. A "Public
Health Research Collaboration" should be supported to address
the variable quality of information on the economic costs of dietary
and physical activity linked patterns of disease, to test epidemiological
models and to develop the "Fully Engaged" model of health,
as outlined in Securing our Future Health.
TRENDS IN
OBESITY
What are the trends in obesity (including trends
among particular groups, by social class, age, gender, ethnicity
and lifestyle? What is the relationship between obesity and other
health inequalities? What are the international comparisons? (EU,
OECD, USA)?
5. Warnings of the impact of obesity are
not new. In 1974, an editorial in the Lancet identified obesity
as "the most important nutritional disease in the affluent
countries of the world."[119]
However only recently have such warnings mobilised official concern.
Even so, the analytic and policy representations of this issue
remain fed through a generally narrow media narrative due to a
variety of factors: the immense lobbying power of the food industry,
the attention in discussions of weight to give attention to personal
appearance rather than health, the individualistic nature of the
discourse around diet (and dieting) and health, and the inability
of commentators to address the structural changes in society which,
more so than individualistic factors, explain the patterns of
diet and exercise, and consequential health effects, facing local
populations. These latter influences range from changes in transport
modes, entertainment, cultural and behavioural change, the reshaping
of childhood an the empowerment of childhood "choice",
the consequent underdevelopment of "health protection"
for children in the light of the commercialisation of culture,
and governmental involvement in private public partnerships which
fail to fully address health consequences.
6. In low-income countries, obesity is more
common in urban areas and amongst people of higher social class.
In more the developed or more affluent countries, obesity has
been common in older age groups, particularly women, though is
becoming increasingly common in poorer populations. However, over
several decades a new pattern has formed based upon spectacular
increases in weigh across the population, allied to changes in
food and drink consumption and lifestyle changes. These trends
are shown into sharp relief in the US in particular and seem related
to a pattern of social, economic and cultural changes in that
country. These bear examination, in part because of the spread
of US culture to the UK, but also because of governmental and
commercial responses which may provide lessons for the UK and
Europe. As a WHO expert group has noted: "In many countries,
perhaps most typified by the USA, changes in family eating patterns
and the consumption of fast foods, pre-prepared meals and carbonated
drinks, have taken place over the past 30 years. Likewise, the
amount of physical activity has been greatly reduced both at home
and in school, as well as by increasing use of mechanised transport."[120]
7. Health care costs in the US. Health economics
has poorly addressed public health issues. The traditional preoccupation
of American health economists has not been with the determinants
of health - such as diet or level of exercise, or the social and
economic costs of avoidable illnessbut rather health care
costs, more accurately the costs of the medical care system, which
are now nevertheless linked overwhelmingly to lifestyle based
chronic diseases. One explanation for the dearth of such studies
that the causes of ill-health, and the economic calculation of
the field of effects, are often complex and require explanations
outside the realm of health economics, as traditionally conceived;
in contrast, data on medical costs is easily available and relatively
clear-cut, particularly in a country where cost accounting for
medicine is so well developed. What is known is that health care
spending in the United States will reach $2.8 trillion in 2011,
up from $1.3 trillion in 2000, and it is growing at an average
annual rate of 7.3%. Expressed as a percentage of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), spending is expected to reach 17% in 2011, up from
13.2% in 2000[121]
(Also bear in mind that almost 40 million Americans in 2000approximately
14% of the population, remain outside health insurance.) This
projected level of spending will produce a heavy burden on the
US economy, since the majority of costs are born by employers
and the federal and state governments. Expenditures on prevention
in the US are a tiny fraction of the amount spent on medical care,
and, apart from the recent injection of funds due to fears of
bio-terrorism, have been falling over the last 20 years.
8. Within this picture the total economic
burden of CVD has officially been estimated at $498 billion for
2001, accounting for 61% of all health care spending. In 1998
CVD claimed nearly 1 million lives and accounted for 40% of all
deaths. Current estimates are that more than 60 million Americans
have one or more types of CVD. According to the US Surgeon General,
approximately 300,000 U.S. deaths a year currently are associated
with obesity and overweight (compared to more than 400,000 deaths
a year associated with cigarette smoking). The total direct and
indirect costs attributed to overweight and obesity amounted to
$117 billion in year 2000around 10% of total health care
costs[122]
One recent study has suggested that obesity is associated with
a 36% increase in inpatient and outpatient spending and a 77%
increase in medications, compared with a 21% increase in inpatient
and outpatient spending and a 28% increase in medications for
current smokers and smaller effects for problem drinkers[123]
Other US research has indicated that there is a clear association
between body mass index and health care costs, largely due to
the link between BMI and coronary heart disease, hypertension,
and diabetes, on a range between 25% greater and 44% greater,
depending of level of BMI[124]
In 1998, there were some 400,000 liposuction procedures in the
United States. Over 100,000 Americans per year now receive gastric
bypass surgery, the "last ditch" technique for halting
further symptoms, such as those associated with diabetes[125]
The total cost of such surgery, ranging from $17,000 to $45,000
per operation, is very considerable, with US total expenditures
on obesity treatment exceeding the total health care expenditures
of many developing countries, where of course obesity is almost
totally absent. Nevertheless it does not seem that the growing
numbers of US citizens who are overweight and obese has appeared
within overall longevity trends.
9. Between 1991 and 2000, obesity levels
in the US, according to the accepted definition, rose 60%. About
61% Americans are overweight and one in five is obese. Thirteen
per cent of children ages 6-11 and 14% of those 12-19 were "seriously
overweight" in 1999. If attention has now focused on obesity,
rather than CVD generally, it is partly because of its sheer visibility
as an outward sign of the problems associated with diet and sedentary
lifestyle. In particular the rising consumption of energy-dense,
micronutrient poor foods, which are high in fat (such as fried
foods), sugar or starch has taken the place of energy-dilute foods
with a high water content (such as fruits and vegetables). According
to US Department of Agriculture data for 2000, the most recent
available, the national food supply provided 280 pounds of fruit
per person. Adjusted for losses and waste, that amounted to less
than half the per person per day minimum consumption of fruit
as recommended by the US Department of Health. Only 3% of the
population meet at least four of the five government dietary recommendations
for the intake of grains, fruits, vegetables, dairy products,
and meats. In contrast consumption of added sugars reached 31
teaspoons per person per day, far above the six- to 18-teaspoon
maximum recommended. Many of these sugars, for younger age groups,
came from the consumption of soft drinks. As regards the latter
there is a strong connection between rising consumption of these
drinks and obesity[126]
Most of the evidence relates to soda drinks but many fruit drinks
and cordials are equally energy dense and may promote weight gain
if drunk in large quantities. In terms of physical activity less
than one-third of Americans meet the federal guidance to engage
in at least 30 minutes of moderate physical activity at least
five days a week, while 40 percent of adults engaged in no leisure-time
physical activity at all. Research has shown that there is a strong
age, sex, ethnic and social class dimension to these both dimensions
with "Latino" and Black communities seeing the most
severe representation. However given that almost two in three
Americans are overweight or obese the problem necessarily stretches
across all social groups.
10. The rise in obesity contrasts with changing
patterns of smoking prevalence, another determinant of CVD risk.
US smoking rates have been cut roughly in half since 1964. Based
on comparative treatment costs, the case is now being made to
treat obesity with equal seriousness as tobacco has been by the
government and by society generally. The significant fall in smoking
rates is a positive sign that the determinants of health can be
changed. It does not indicate, however, that the combination of
approaches applied to tackling the tobacco epidemic will necessarily
work for diet and sedentary lifestyle.
11. Europe, unlike the US, is divided by
language and national histories, and therefore does not evidence
a similar degree of cultural homogenisation as the US; nor is
the conversion to the fast food/television entertainment lifestyle
as pronounced. European. data collection is also more diverse.
Nevertheless, Europe too is witnessing changes in mdiet and physical
activity in ways, which appear to follow the pattern set by the
US. The result is shown in the varying prevalence of obesity across
a number of European countries.
PREVALENCE OF OBESITY (BMI ~ 30) IN A SELECTION
OF EUROPEAN COUNTRIES

12. The UK, like the US, shows growing,
though comparatively recent, trends towards obesity and overweight
as well as a strong age, sex, social class and ethnic dimension
to the problem, as shown in the table. The issue of adult obesity
and overweight has been much discussed but a major focus of any
strategy should be on children. It is believed that levels of
obesity in Britain are increasing at an appreciable rate in primary
school children.[127]
Surveys indicate little change was found in the prevalence of
overweight or obesity from 1974 to 1984. From 1984 to 1994 overweight
increased from 5.4% to 9.0% in English boys and from 6.4% to 10.0%
in Scottish boys; values for girls were 9.3% to 13.5% and from
10.4% to 15.8% respectively[128]
BMI is not considered by many researchers to be a reliable measure
for children and waist circumference has been used as an alternative
measure. Research using this measure suggests that waist circumference
in British youth has increased over the past 10-20 years at a
greater rate than body mass index, the increase being greatest
in females[129]
13. Prevention costs are money well spent.
Each year about 74 billion Euro are spent on treating cardiovascular
disease (CVD) in the European Union. But CVD also costs an additional
106 billion Euro a year in lost production of goods and services
because of premature death and disability. In total CVD costs
the European Union about 180 billion Euro a year. (These estimates
are based on four separate costs of disease analyses carried out
for the UK, the Netherlands, Sweden and Germany.) The WHO also
recommend that fat intake should be less than 30% of total energy
but the dietary survey data shows that 21 out of 26 countries
fail to meet this goal. There are paradoxes too, however. In Spain
overweight for children aged 6-7 is above that of the USA, while
adolescent overweight levels are among the highest in the world.
Nevertheless, CVD mortality is low, as with Italy and France,
and the cancer mortality rate is lower than Italy and France[130]
Some European states, such as Sweden have taken child health protection
seriously and have enforced an advertising ban on products sold
to children. On food the Swedish National Institute of Public
Health have reviewed the EU Common Agricultural policy and have
issued important recommendations for reform. Their proposed recommendations
include those with important implications for obesity and overweight,
including: phasing out all consumption aid to dairy products with
a high fat content, promotion of fruit and vegetables in schools,
redistribution of agricultural support to favour the fruit and
vegetable sector and increased consumption[131]
These policies bear closely consideration for adoption in the
UK and EU-wide.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Overweight and obesity are worldwide
problems, which require a global, European and UK-wide perspective.
At the global level the UK should be fully involved in the development
and implementation of the WHO strategy on Non-Communicable Diseases.
At the European level it must be involved in the reform of the
Common Agricultural Policy to stimulate reform based upon public
health principles and lobby to ensure that health protection is
given the highest prominence. At the UK level the Departments
of Health across all four nations must take the lead to stimulate
cross-governmental working.
Investment must be made in prevention.
The Chancellor should give consideration to extra taxation of
high fat, high salt and high sugar processed foods and drinks.
A hypothecated tax may be able contribute towards the costs of
the National Fruit in Schools schemes and support further initiatives
of this kind, particularly focussed on poorer communities.
What are the causes of the rise in
obesity in recent decades?
WHAT HAS
BEEN THE
ROLE OF
CHANGES IN
DIET?
To what extent have changes in lifestyle, particularly
moves to a more sedentary lifestyle, been influential? How much
is lack of physical activity contributing to the problem?
14. The dietary evidence for good health
is clear. The World Health Organisation (WHO) and the UK's Committee
on Medical Aspects of Food and Nutrition (COMA) recommend eating
at least five portions 400g) of fruit and vegetables a day[132]
The World Health Organisation have summarised a range of factors
that might promote or protect against weight gain and obesity
(see chart below)[133]
It has been shown that consumption of antioxidant vitamins through
dietary sources such as faits and vegetables, oily fish and fibre
from fruits and vegetables (in particular from cereals and grains)
can protect against the development of CVD[134]
The key issues in maintaining weight control and improving health
are not mysterious: a balanced and varied diet and an active lifestyle.
Dieting should be avoided because it leads to behaviour swings
rather than balance. Most people in Britain know this. Why therefore
is the situation worsening?
SUMMARY OF STRENGTH OF EVIDENCE ON FACTORS
THAT MIGHT PROMOTE OR PROTECT AGAINST WEIGHT GAIN AND OB ESITYa

Strength of evidence: the totality of the evidence
was taken into account. The World Cancer Research Fund schema
was taken as the starting point but was modified in the following
manner: randomized controlled trials were given prominence as
the highest ranking study design randomized controlled trials
were not a major source of cancer evidence): associated evidence
and expert opinion was also taken into account in relation to
environmental determinants (direct trials were usually not available).
b
Specific amounts will depend on the analytical
methodologies used to measure fibre.
c
Energy-dense and micronutrient-poor foods tend
to be processed foods that are high in fat and or sugar. Low energy-dense
for energy-dense for energy-dilute foods, such as fruit. Legumes,
vegetables and whole gran cereals are high in dietary fibre and
water.
d
Associated evidence and expert opinion included.
15. The answer can be found in starkest
form in the US. One leading culprit is the "fast foodhigh
fatsoft drink" diet and the constant pressure on individuals
to consumewhich makes the attempt to secure a balanced
diet socially deviant. According to Eric Schlosser in "Fast
Food Nation", Happy Meals were introduced by McDonald's Corporation
in 1979just one year before childhood obesity rates began
to climb. About 90% of America's children between three and nine
years visit a McDonald's every month. In the US over the last
30 years average portion sizes in hamburger chains have doubled
as well as has the consumption of fizzy, sugary drinks. In the
case of the US schools are no longer protected areas and children
are marketed to extensivelywith McDonald' advertising budget
alone exceeding one billion dollars. According to Fortune magazine
$4.5 billion a year is spent by the food industry on advertising
and $50 million a year is spent on lobbying in Washington, D.C.[135]
The US Surgeon General reported that that school foods had the
highest saturated fat density of all food outlets. The key economic
importance of screen based entertainment (television, videogames)
and private motor transportation means that rates of exercise
have declined.
16. British culture has been following the
US in many respects. Young adults (aged 19 to 24 years) are the
group most likely to have adapted to the new commercial cultural
influences and to consume energy-dense fast foods, typically fried
chicken, burgers, kebabs, savoury snacks, together high sugar
carbonated soft drinks. One large government survey indicated
that nearly two-thirds of men, and one-third of women, aged 19
to 24 years had eaten burgers and kebabs during the recording
period, compared with one in ten of the oldest group of men and
women. Over half of all respondents, 54% of men and 57% of women,
had eaten chocolate confectionery during the seven-day dietary
recording period, and about a fifth, 20% of men and 25% of women,
had eaten sugar confectionery. On the healthier food ranges 30%
of men and 43% of women aged 19 to 24 years had consumed leafy
green vegetables compared with 64% of men and 70% of women aged
50 to 64 years[136]
Data would appear to indicate that younger people are adopting
less healthy diets than the older generation, and comment has
already been made in the US that older people are getting on average
healthier while younger people are experiencing substantial growth
in asthma and diabetes[137]
The diet of the poorer people in the UK provides cheap energy
from foods such as meat products, full cream milk, fats, sugars,
preserves, potatoes, and cereals but has little intake of vegetables,
fruit, and whole wheat bread. According to one assessment: "Households
in the bottom tenth of the income distribution spend on average
29% of their disposable income on food (after allowance for housing
costs); those in the top tenth spend 18%. In families with children,
expenditure on food per person in the bottom fifth of income is
extraordinarily low (£1.64/person/day in lone parent families).
Low socioeconomic groups, however, buy more efficiently than high-income
households: the bottom tenth spends far less on alcohol (£1.85/person/week
v £7.73 in the top tenth) and sweets (£0.46 v £0.68).
But these efficiencies lead to the purchase of foods richer in
energy (high in fat and sugar) to satisfy hunger, which are much
cheaper per unit of energy than foods rich in protective nutrients
(like fruits and vegetables). The purchase of healthy options
within mainstream eating patterns is likely to increase the food
bill by 6-13%."[138]
Food poverty must be part of the understanding of population weight
gain, but it is only one. If health inequalities are to be tackled
food poverty must be an essential component of the national strategy.
17. The other side of the coin to dietary
problems is declining physical activity. There is a dispute, particularly
present in the US, that the decline in physical activity is more
significant for health than changes in diet, although this suggestion
is most loudly voiced by organisations and researchers financially
supported by the food industry. We suggest that both factors are
important and that they are linked. In the UK there is ample evidence
that rates of "passive exercise"physical activity
undertaken as part of everyday lifehas declined. Government
studies show that the number of trips per person on foot fell
by 20% between 1985-86 and 1997-99[139]
The principal cause for the decline in walking was, as argued
by the House of Commons Select Committee on Environment, Transport
and Regional Affairs, that "the convenience and comfort of
car travel; land use planning policies; the truly awful conditions
for pedestrians; and increasingly the fear of being attacked or
robbed. These factors are heavily influenced by the extraordinarily
low status accorded to pedestrians. As a result walking is seen
by many as the mode of transport for those who have no alternative"[140]
It is probable that London's traffic congestion charge, which
has reduced traffic levels in central London by 18%, will have
also boosted levels of exercise by shifting people to public transportation
and to walking. An implication that may be drawn is that policies,
which make good sense on environmental grounds, also make good
sense on health grounds. According to a briefing Parliamentary
Office of Science and Technology, the facts behind the decline
in physical activity are the following:
Reduction in occupational physical
activity.
Greater use of the car.
Decline of walkingpersonal
safely especially of children women and older people.
Increase in energy saving devices
in public placesescalators, lifts automatic doors.
Reduction in physical education and
sport in some schools.
Adults fears of childrens' safety
in unsupervised play.
Substitution of physical activity
leisure with sedentary past times like television, computer games
and the internet[141]
18. The result is that in the general population
in England, only one-third of men meet the current guideline for
recommended participation in physical activity. Within this general
picture there is considerable variation by ethnicity and sex.
Surveys using age-standardised ratios indicate that Black Caribbean
men are more active than average and most other minority ethnic
groups less than average, in particular Chinese and Bangladeshi.
men. For women however, only just over one in five of the general
population met the guideline. Again, Black Caribbean women were
more active, but other groups, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, and
Bangladeshi were far less active. The statistics on the Bangladeshi
community are notable, Bangladeshi men are almost twice as likely
than the general population to be classified as sedentary and
Bangladeshi women almost three times[142]
A study commissioned by Sport England, showed that young people
spend less time doing PE in school than they used to (in 1994,
46% did two or more hours per week compared to 33% in 1999).
19. One major feature of physical inactivity
is the pervasiveness of screen-based entertainment in a variety
of forms, ranging from television to computer games. There are
two sides to the issue. People watching television are physically
inactive: children who watch television five or more hours a day
are five times as likely to be overweight as those who watch less
than two hours a day. Time spent playing computer games and surfing
the Internet is time lost playing outside and being physically
active. Secondly, children watching television are influenced
by food advertising, which is invariably linked to the unhealthier
range of food products. Young children are unable to distinguish
programme content from the persuasive intent of advertisements.
It might be noted that parents are very concerned about the influences
of television on their children. ITC research has noted: "There
was a widespread belief that children are affected by advertising
on television. This manifested itself through pester power, direct
copying of behaviour, and a more subtle and gradual effect on
attitudes. The concern was felt most strongly for children without
much family support."[143]
Television advertising to children makes food into "fun"
and presents to them that food choices are "their choices"
(in fact the advertiser's) rather than those of their parents.
RECOMMENDATION
A national strategy for obesity and
overweight requires interventions right across society, engaging
industry and the food sector, television and the media, schools,
and communities.
WHAT CAN
BE DONE
ABOUT IT?
What is the range of "levers" and drivers
(food industry, marketing, education, family life, genetics, drugs,
surgery)? Within that range, what role can the food industry,
marketing and advertising, transport, schooling play? What are
the responsibilities of the food industry in respect of marketing?
How influential is the media? How can the amount of physical activity
being undertaken be increased? To what extent can and should Government,
at central and local level, influence lifestyle choices? How coherent
is national and local strategy? What is international best practice?
20. The food industry is not monolithic.
Farmers and grower produce fruit and vegetables which should be
consumed more, but which are in decline; but farmers and food
processors, soft drink makers and other produce products which
should consumed less, but which are profitable. In the case of
the former advertising in minimal; in the case of the latter they
are subject to high advertising budgets. It is particularly relevant
and meaningful that numerous sports stars at the peak of activity
are connected to products, which are unhealthy. The link between
David Beckham and Pepsi Cola and Gary Lineker, former footballer
and trusted commentator, and Walkers Crisps (also a Pepsi product)
is symptomatic of the issue.
21. In the UK, the market for biscuits,
chocolates and sugar confectionary alone in 2001 was £1.79
billion for biscuits, £3.89 billion for chocolate confectionery
and £1.75 billion for sugar confectionery[144]
These are significant industries with significant advertising
budgets. The advertising industry, for whom children's advertising
is part of their staple income, naturally opposes advertising
controls: "To advocate arbitrary restrictions on food advertising
to children is to misunderstand fundamentally the role of advertising
in the context of the media as a whole, family life, individual
choice, programme funding and market competition."[145]
Other organisations, such as the Social Issues Resource Centre,
oppose more thorough restrictions on the food sector, such as
taxation related to fat content. Coincidentally, this charitable
organisation has received funding from Kelloggs, Mars, the Biscuit,
Cake, Chocolate and Confectionery Alliance, HP Danone, the Sugar
Bureau, among others. These companies "share SIRC's basic
interest in promoting better understanding of health and social
issues"[146]
We merely observe that not all organisations which purport to
offer advice to government or to the public do so in the interest
of public health. There are many things that can be done working
with industry. But the involvement of industry should operate
within clear guidance and clearly set out principles, recognising
that if industry is willing to finance public campaigns this partnership
may undermine the independence of governmental advice and furthermore
that its primary agenda is financial returns to investors
22. On the other hand, some parts of the
food industry take the issue of obesity extremely seriously in
the light of the threat of US-originated legal actions. Following
massive legal actions brought by US States and consumers against
the tobacco industry litigation has begun to focus on the link
between fast foods and obesity, particularly around children.
As Fortune magazine notes: "Fast food, snack food, and soft
drink companies focus their marketing on children and adolescents
through Saturday morning TV commercials; through cuddly characters
like Ronald McDonald (the second most recognized figure among
children after Santa Claus); through contracts to advertise and
serve soft drinks and fast food in schools; and through ever-changing
toys included in Happy Meals."[147]
23. This trend is a warning to the food
industry and government. The assumption by much of industry is
that it can it protect its interests by financially supporting
physical activity initiatives, as in the case of Cadbury/Youth
Sports Trust voucher scheme. Such schemes may ultimately be self-defeating
in both publicity terms and in health terms, since critics point
out that any benefits are reduced by the requirement of extra
sales of high fat products[148]
The question for government support for such schemes is whether
it is willing to split physical activity benefits from health
losses due to the consumption of fatty foods. We must be emphatic:
the state has a duty to protect the health of young people and
should not place itself in the trading off benefit for losses;
in any case, as noted, by nutrition and physical activity are
mutually interrelated.
24. The rise of diet related disease in
this new century may be as serious as recent (and continuing)
epidemics, where the state was also slow to acteg tobaccoand
prevaricated over critical public health measures, such as advertising
bans. In the case of food choices/dietary problems among young
people, however, these tend to persist throughout life unless
something is done in the earliest stages. Chronic disease risks
frequently begin early in life (in fact in the womb). Adult chronic
disease reflects cumulative differential lifetime exposures to
damaging physical and social environments. A life course analysis
indicates that actions can be taken from the earliest phase of
life to its last phases: from the encouragement of breast feeding,
for which there is increasingly strong evidence suggesting that
a lower risk of developing obesity[149]
to old age, where exercise can appreciably influence a range of
factors, from quality of life to risk of osteoporosis and reduced
less risk of CVD[150]
There is a role for individuals and communities, for the commercial
sector and for the state, but the respective interaction between
each should be part of a national strategy and should not be decided
on an ad hoc basis by one department of government (for example
education or sports) without being part of an overall framework
monitored either by the Department of Health or else through a
cross-departmental body such as the Cabinet Office.
25. Individuals and communities have an
important role to play in maintaining their health. Highly motivated
individuals can significantly reduce the risk of becoming obese
or their risks of developing type 2 diabetes through a daily brisk
walk, by reducing the hours they watch television, or making minor
adjustments to their diet.[151]
[152]On
the otherhand for the population as a whole rejuvenating the household
"food culture" or restoring exercise in their daily
lives will not be easyfor reasons addressed by the earlier
mentioned report of Commons Select Committee on Environment, Transport
and Regional Affairs. British towns and cities have been increasingly
redesigned for cars, leading to a life-threatening level of exercise
deprivation. Our future health depends on creating neighbourhoods
that are conducive to walking, strolling, running and bicycling.
The challenge is to redesign our communities and to build in "health
regeneration" into all schemes for town planning, making
public transportation the centrepiece of urban transport, and
augmenting it with bikeways or footpaths. This also means replacing
parking areas with parks, playgrounds, and playing fields. Unless
Britain can design society to systematically restore exercise
to our daily routines, the obesity epidemic- and the health deterioration
associated with itwill continue to spread. The House of
Commons Health Committee will doubtless be presented with many
examples of societies, not so dissimilar to our own, which give
a far higher commitment to the dietary health of children, the
"health protection" of children from advertising and
the pervasive marketing of unhealthy foods, which build daily
life around exercise, such as walking or cycling. Unfortunately
there is no national debate over the potential for introducing
these desirable features into British life. On the contrary, even
public sector broadcasters like the BBC are more eager to make
programmes on the virtues of driving fast cars, as ironically
indicated by the expanding girth of their presenters. To the question
of whether there is a coherent, government-wide, and economically
and media grounded strategy, the answer must be that for diet
(or for exercise) there is none[153]
This matter must be urgently redressed.
26. This response has suggested the usefulness
of on international perspective on obesity and overweight, In
the US official recognition of the severity of the economic, social
and health costs of obesity has led the US Surgeon General to
issue a Call to Action[154]
The US Surgeon General's strategies include the following:
Ensure daily, quality physical education
for all school grades. Currently, only one state in the countryIllinoisrequires
physical education (for school children) while only about one
in four teenagers nationwide take part in some form of physical
education.
Ensure that more food options that
are low in fat and calories, as well as fruits, vegetables, whole
grains, and low fat or non-fat dairy products, are available on
school campuses and at school events. A modest step toward achieving
this would be to enforce existing U.S. Department of Agriculture
regulations that prohibit serving foods of minimal nutritional
value during mealtimes in school food service areas, including
in vending machines.
Make community facilities available
for physical activity for all people, including on the weekends.
Create more opportunities for physical
activity at work sites.
Reduce time spent watching television
and in other sedentary behaviours. In 1999, 43% of high-school
students reported watching two hours of TV or more a day.
Educate all expectant parents about
the benefits of breast-feeding. Studies indicate breast-fed infants
may be less likely to become overweight as they grow older.
Change the perception of obesity
so that health becomes the chief concern, not personal appearance.
Increase research on the behavioural
and biological causes of overweight and obesity. Direct research
toward prevention and treatment, and toward ethnic/racial health
disparities.
Educate health care providers and
health profession students on the prevention and treatment of
overweight and obesity across the lifespan.
27. For the most part, these are sensible
suggestions some of which have UK relevance. Unfortunately, these
strategies are mostly at the level of exhortation and, without
powers of implementation, resemble a wish list. In devising a
UK strategy in the light of the challenge this implies that more
than "modest steps" are needed.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Advertising to children. There is
a case to be made for proper analysis and action around the Health
Protection needs of children. One part of this must be the review
of restrictions on food advertisements. We propose that all advertising
for foods during television programmes watched by children under
the end of ten years should be halted. For older age groups the
Department of Health and Food Standards Agency should formulate
guidance with industry.
The NAO 2002 report on obesity recommended
that the Department of Health should lead the development of a
new cross-Government strategy to promote the health benefits of
physical activity. This is now promised. This must be focussed
on matters far wider than encouragement of exercise and should
be accompanied by guidance to planners across government and local
authorities to stimulate a physical activity culture. Recognition
should be given to the value of alternative forms of physical
activity such as the Green Gyms programme.
Transport and recreation policies
promote, support and protect physical activity. For example, urban
planning, transportation and building design should give priority
to the safety and transit of pedestrians and safe bicycle use.
Policy innovations range from congestion charging to reduced speed
limits in urban areas. Safe routes to School programme rolled
out to include all schools.
Food in schools. Nutritional guidance
on school meals neglects the general question of what children
are actually eating in schools, the evidence being that they are
eating unhealthy food - while under the supervision of the State.
Greater regulation of free school meals to ensure that they provide
a healthy meal for all recipients. Provision of free healthy breakfasts
for all primary school children. All schools-based commercial
promotions of foods should be ended and schools encouraged to
adopt model school foods policies, which for, example, end the
link between income generation and the operation of school tuck-shops.
Price differentials should be introduced in schools to encourage
the consumption of the healthier range of foods. Free drinking
water should be provided in all schools to provide an alternative
to carbonated sugary drinks.
ARE THE
INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURES
IN PLACE
TO DELIVER
AN IMPROVEMENT?
What is the role of the Department of Health (DoH)
and of the NHS, including that of primary care, hospitals and
specialist clinics? How effective are the structures for health
promotion? Can health promotion compete with huge food sector
advertising budgets? To what extent can the food industry be part
of a solution? To what extent is the Food Standards Agency influential?
How well is the DH liaising with, and what is the role of, other
central and local government departments and bodies? What is the
role of schools, including sport in schools? Who should "own"
and, drive delivery? Have we the appropriate institutional structures,
budgets and priorities?
28. All public authorities, including the
NHS, Transport, Education, Defra, etc, as well as private bodies,
ranging from public health to voluntary organisations, should
fully address the seriousness of this new situation. What must
be considered however, is the appropriate strategy they should
adopt towards those companies and practices, which are "fattening
the nation". The role of individual departments of government
has to be set within an overall cross-governmental strategy led
from the highest reaches of government, based on the advice of
the Chief Medical Officer, in concert with the Department of Health
and the Food Standards Agency. Many voluntary organisations and
professional organisations can play a role, particularly in developing
innovative programmes focused on young people (such as the NHF
Young at Heart Campaign). It is essential that government is open
to innovation from outside.
29. From the centre the Department of Health
has devised a variety of schemes to improve nutrition in schools
(principally the National Fruit in Schools Scheme) and is the
Departmental Sponsor, with the Education Department, of Healthy
Schools. The Five a Day initiative and other schemes, hold considerable
promisealthough we have witnessed two supermarket groups
failing to offer their support. The bigger picture is that the
Department's work faces almost insuperable odds: industry marketing
of fatty, surgery or salty foods is far better funded and its
marketing is far more influential, particularly at a time when
centrally the Department of Health is being reorganised and personnel
downsized by one-third. The critical issue for the Department
is its capacity to provide leadership across government, in concert
with the Food Standards Agency.
30. The NHS, within the general framework
of the DH, has an extremely important role to play and National
Service Frameworks should offer a strong guide to effective clinical
practice. Primary care trusts in England, and their devolved counterparts,
also have a role to play and leadership in nutrition and physical
activity should be vested through Directors of Public Health,
working closely with local authorities. Far more can also be achieved
by Environmental Health Departments, and more should be asked
of them. The aim must be engage all local bodies in locally-owned
activities to promote not just individual behaviour change but
the everyday frameworks through which people operate their lives.
Healthy choices in diet and physical activity must be made the
automatic choice, not somethinglike dietingthat
people have to consciously think about and where they usually
fail. There is a further, and more difficult question for the
NHS. How many of its large staff are given opportunities to improve
their diet and increase their physical activity? In other words,
how far in the NHS a health service for its staff?
31. The support and protection of children
through healthy pathways to adult life is particularly important.
Unfortunately the Education Department (DFES) has been "symbolically
compromised" through its involvement in cause related marketing
initiatives such as with Walkers Crisps (a division of Pepsi-Cola)
in their "Free books for School" campaign. This scheme
was criticised by the Consumer's Association as poor value and
by the National Audit Office as compromising the government's
general health message to young people. To its credit, the Education
Department has introduced nutritional standards for school meals
in 2001 to improve children's diets. Unfortunately, this approach
has been shown to be far too narrow. Which? found that the schools
visited indicated that the caterers are meeting the standards,
which specify how frequently certain foods must be offered. A
wide variety of foods, including vegetables, salad and fruit were
on offer every day. However, the children usually opted for the
less healthy dishes. In 2003 Which? asked 246 children to keep
a food diary. The diaries were filled with details of crisps,
chips and chocolate bars, but rarely mentioned fruit or vegetables.
Diets were typically lacking many vital nutrients, and often high
in saturated fat, sugar and salt[155]
The Education Department must do better. Children and their families
should not be used a fodder for marketing schemes of the junk
food manufacturers. This said the protection of children must
extend beyond the school gates, particularly since some evidence
suggests that The question is: who will protect society from large
companies whose are adapt at marketing and whose very business
engages the sales of fatty surgery or salty foods? The answer,
as yet, does not seem with the Education Department, the Department
of Health or the Food Standards Agency. They must be given the
powers and political support to do so.
32. The Department of Work.and Pensions
should work with the Department of Health and Food Standards Agency
to examine the link between benefits and diet. Clearly, if poverty
related problems in food and access to physical activity are to
be addressed DWP can be a substantial source of help. Pathways
to Work notes the rise in people receiving incapacity benefit,
and that a rising part of incapacity is associated with mental
health problems. It is critical to find ways to help people out
of work or in receipt of incapacity benefit to establish the means
of leading healthier lives. What mechanisms can be built within
the framework of DWP activities to encourage healthier lifestyles,
which can play an important part in improving well-being and hence
stimulate a return to work?
RECOMMENDATIONS
Actions are required right across
government. We propose the formation of Task Force, involving
bodies outside government, to assemble a national strategy, having
the power to make recommendations to government. This Task Force
should report back to the Prime Minister within six months.
The proposed local Food Action Plans
(in England), operated through Local Strategic Partnerships, should
be adequately funded and closely linked with Physical Activity
Strategies. There is a strong leadership role here for Directors
of Public Health, but their work must be integrated through Local
Strategic Partnerships and must engage Environmental Health Departments
and other departments in the Local Authority (leisure, planning,
housing, education).
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
NATIONAL AND
LOCAL STRATEGY
How can the Government's strategy be improved?
What are the policy options? Can they be better integrated? What
are the priorities for action?
33. The key issue is that human diet and
fitness, particularly for children, must be made a matter of national
urgency. It is not simply a matter for the Government, indeed
early leadership in this area has come from professional bodies,
non-governmental organisations, and others. Nutrition forms part
of the NHS Plan, but note, this was a plan for the NHS - not for
society or for governmentas along the lines of the previous
Our Healthier Nation: Saving Lives initiatives (for England, with
differences in name and emphasis for the devolved administrations).
The UKPHA and the Faculty of Public Health Medicine emphasises
that action should be taking place across government and that
there should be regular evaluation reports on progress issued
by the Health Development Agency. At present it appears that the
HDA can evaluate activities in the field but that it cannot evaluate
the activities of the Department of Health. To the question of
who evaluates the work of the Department of Health or the success
of coordination across government the answer must be "no
one".
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