Daily Dispatch

Number of obese youngsters in SA ‘doubles over six years’

- By NICO GOUS

THE number of young South Africans suffering from obesity doubled in six years while this took 13 years to happen in the US.

That’s according to research published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Epidemiolo­gy on December 14 last year.

Local researcher­s from the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN)‚ University of the Witwatersr­and (Wits)‚ and internatio­nal researcher­s from Denmark and England analysed the body mass index (BMI) of South African children‚ adolescent­s and young adults from 2008 to 2015.

The study analysed the mean BMI of 28 247 people from 7 301 households by age and year. The analysis did not include children under the age of five years.

Researcher­s found there was a greater increase of obesity in lowand middle-income countries (LMIC) compared to global trends.

“South Africa is undergoing rapid socio-economic and demographi­c changes that have triggered a rapid nutrition transition.”

There was also a rapid rise in the BMI of people between the ages of six and 25 years‚ especially among women in urban areas of middlehigh socio-economic groups.

The largest gains were in KwaZulu-Natal‚ Free State‚ North West and Limpopo.

This can be attributed to growth in gross domestic product (GDP)‚ more disposable income‚ increased exposure to globalisat­ion and the establishm­ent of large urban informal settlement­s.

This has driven changes in dietary patterns to cheap energydens­e foodstuffs‚ people drinking more sugary drinks and increased consumptio­n of saturated fats and animal proteins.

Researcher­s said if lower-and middle-income countries continued to expand faster than the global pattern, it affects the developmen­t of the country and overtaxes the national health care budget. The indirect costs will be a burden on households due to lost wages. “Overweight/obesity is also likely to reduce the productive life of working individual­s and negatively impact on local GDP through absenteeis­m.”

According to the researcher­s there is a 70% chance of an overweight child remaining overweight as an adult.

The risk of childhood obesity includes diabetes‚ hypertensi­on‚ cardiovasc­ular and kidney diseases. — DDC

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