Daily Mail

CLOSED SCHOOLS OBESITY CRISIS

Child health experts warn of hidden toll on pupils

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

SCHOOL closures are putting a generation of children at risk of obesity, health chiefs warned last night.

They said lack of exercise could have devastatin­g long-term consequenc­es when one in five pupils are already excessivel­y overweight.

‘We need to get kids back to school as soon as we can for their health,’ said russell Viner, who leads the royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health. ‘Everybody in the nutritiona­l world is concerned.’

Most of the ten million pupils from reception to Year 10 will be off school for at least six months – from March to september – because of the pandemic.

Professor Viner, who is on the Government’s scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, added: ‘We talk endlessly about the risks of transmissi­on of Covid, and that’s incredibly important, but it’s not the only thing.

‘The risk-balance equation for children is about the risks of not being in school and poor mental health, poor sleep and potentiall­y lack of exercise and obesity.’

Professor Jonathan Valabhji, NHs chief for diabetes and obesity, said the lockdown would only worsen the nation’s weight problem. Their warnings came as: Just 36 virus deaths were recorded in 24 hours – the lowest toll since lockdown began;

Boris Johnson urged the country to ‘shop with confidence’ when non-essential stores reopen today with huge price cuts;

Ministers are preparing to drop the twometre rule by the end of the month;

The boss of ofsted said social distancing in

schools was an aspiration not an absolute requiremen­t;

Campsite owners said they had been given no advice about how to open with social distancing;

Travel and hospitalit­y bosses accused Priti Patel of ‘presiding over disaster’ with her border quarantine policy; Rishi Sunak warned of hardship ahead. The Government last week abandoned plans for all primary school children to return before the summer holidays.

Some secondary groups are restarting this week but caps on class sizes are causing problems. It means that most pupils up to GCSE age will have been at home for nearly six months by the time they go back in September.

Professor Viner said: ‘The concern is if this really persists in the long term, or stops people being active together.

‘It is very likely that children and young people are getting much less exercise activity as a nation. We know that for a lot of children and young people, they don’t particular­ly exercise but they get their activity from daily living.

‘ That’s walking to school, walking around at school, moving between classes, kicking a football with your mates. That’s how most children burn energy. But that’s not happening for the great majority of children. In lockdown, most have not been able to do that.’

He said that the good exercise habits some families adopted at the start of the lockdown may well have faded.

Over a fifth of Year 6 children aged ten and 11 are already classed as clinically obese according to NHS figures. The

‘Getting much less exercise’

impact of school closures on childhood obesity will not be known for some time because the National Child Measuremen­t programme, which records weights in Reception and Year 6, has been paused.

Caroline Cerny of the Obesity Health Alliance, a coalition of over 40 health organisati­ons, said: ‘There is some evidence that childhood obesity increases when children are out of school for the six-week summer break and it’s likely that we could see a similar effect as a result of lockdown measures.’

Tam Fry, chairman of the National Obesity Forum, said: ‘I very much fear that Professor Viner is correct and worry that we may never know how much weight they are piling on. Children put weight on in the summer even when they have every opportunit­y to exercise but the lockdown without their friends to play with will certainly take its toll.’

Professor Viner, who is a paediatric­ian and adolescent physician at University College London’s Institute for Child Health, said that although families were eating fewer takeaways, the snack cupboard ‘was always available’.

He added: ‘For some families they will focus more on healthy eating and not going out, but for others, the very poor, that pushes them into food insecurity and the cheapest food is the least healthy.

‘If you have really no money, the cheapest thing is massive packs of really

unhealthy food.’

THE failure to get many children back to school is among the biggest scandals of the pandemic.

For every day pupils miss formal lessons their life prospects diminish. But their health also suffers incalculab­le harm.

Today, we report how classroom closures risk fuelling the childhood obesity crisis. A Government adviser warns youngsters stuck at home aren’t doing enough exercise.

Professor Russell Viner says that instead of fighting flab in the playground, many become couch potatoes. Fewer have nutritious school meals – and the biscuit tin is temptingly in reach. This is a ticking timebomb. A third of children already leave primary school overweight.

Obesity increases the danger of lifethreat­ening illnesses – sending countless numbers to an early grave. And now, children are being callously used by militant teaching unions as political pawns. Ministers must get them back in school urgently.

Covid-19 poses a microscopi­c peril to children. The tragedy would be if their lives were shortened by needlessly being kept away from the classroom.

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