Daily Mail

Our fat children are some of the least healthy in the world

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

Our teenagers and children are among the unhealthie­st in the Western world, a major report has found.

Obesity, lack of exercise and deep social divides mean young people here are more likely to have longstandi­ng illnesses than those in other countries.

A comparison of the health of young people in the uK with that of young people in 18 other countries shows that we are lagging behind on key markers of health.

British teenagers aged 15 to 19 have the highest rates of obesity in Europe and the fifth highest in the developed world, according to the report by the Nuffield Trust think tank and the Associatio­n for Young People’s Health.

Some 8 per cent of teenagers in this age group are obese – a greater figure than those in 14 other European countries including Italy, France, Belgium, Spain, Greece and Germany.

Only the uS, New Zealand, Canthe ada and Australia have higher teenage obesity levels, it showed.

The problems start early, with exercise levels in 11- year- olds coming second lowest in the world, above only Portugal.

Just 51 per cent of 11-year- old boys in England and Wales participat­e in two or more hours of vigorous physical activity a week, rising to only 67 per cent in Scotland. In comparison, 38 per cent of girls of the same age in England do two hours’ exercise a week, similar to 37 per cent in Wales. But this rises to 60 per cent in Scotland.

The report authors wrote: ‘Lack of exercise in adolescenc­e is linked to several chronic conditions in later life, such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertensi­on, heart disease and even low mood.’

The study found that children and young people in Britain are also far more likely to be obese if they are poor, and that the uK has some of the highest inequaliti­es between the richest and poorest when it comes to obesity.

It also found that England has the highest proportion of young people aged 16 to 24 living with a longstandi­ng health condition, rising from 13.5 per cent in 2008 to 18.5 per cent in 2016.

Nuffield Trust chief executive Nigel Edwards said: ‘If we don’t take action now, the next generation will be entering adulthood sicker than the one before it.’

Emma rigby, of the Associatio­n for Young People’s Health, said: ‘We need more understand­ing of young people’s health needs, improved support for young people to understand and manage their own health, and we need to provide more youth- friendly health services.’

Louise Meincke, of the World Cancer research Fund, said the ‘ devastatin­g’ figures show more must be done to protect children’s health.

She added: ‘Children who are obese are more likely to be obese as adults, and this increases their risk of 12 different cancers and other life-threatenin­g conditions.’

‘Devastatin­g figures’

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