The Daily Telegraph

Professor Philip James

Expert on obesity who popularise­d the Body Mass Index and waged war on the junk food industry

- Philip James, born June 27 1938, died October 5 2023

PROFESSOR PHILIP JAMES, who has died aged 85, was a pioneer of research into nutrition and in particular obesity, an issue on which he rang increasing­ly desperate alarm bells.

The obese are at major risk of serious and chronic diseases that can lead to premature death, reduce the individual’s quality of life and impose a huge burden on the economy.

In England in 1980 just 6 per cent of men and 8 per cent of women were obese; in 1986, as figures started to rocket, the government set a target to return to 1980 levels by 2005. Instead the problem got worse. In 2021-22, 25.9 per cent of adults were estimated to be obese.

In a recent interview James recalled how, while teaching nutrition at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, he became interested in the then unusual problem of obesity in middle-aged women. In 1972 his applicatio­n for a grant turned into a request by the Department of Health (DOH) and the Medical Research Council (MRC) to develop an analysis of the research literature on obesity.

James’s report, published in 1976, suggested for the first time that obesity could become a major public health problem. It recommende­d the use of the Body Mass Index (BMI), a value devised in the 19th century and defined as the body mass divided by the square of the body height. Based on data of blood pressure and premature mortality rates at different BMI levels, James defined a BMI of 25 and above as overweight and BMI of 30 and above as obese – thresholds that are now internatio­nal benchmarks.

“We knew that the BMI was a crude measure and, for example, rugby players might be ‘obese’ but were stacked with muscle,” James recalled. “Neverthele­ss, we were able to specify the degree of overweight at each level of BMI in the average man and woman.”

As director of the government-funded Rowett Research Institute in Aberdeen from 1982 to 1999 and founder in 1995 of the Internatio­nal Obesity Task Force, a charity which advocates policies for obesity prevention, James became increasing­ly alarmed by evidence that the problem was getting worse. The main culprit, in his view, was a multinatio­nal food industry which often targeted people on low incomes and children in its marketing of foodstuffs and drinks with a high fat, sugar or salt content.

“The rubbish that people eat is atrocious and the manipulati­on of poor people is unspeakabl­e,” James declared in 2013. “The agricultur­al production of excess fats and sugars has also been subsidised by government­s for half a century to the tune of trillions of dollars... so that if you are poor you cannot afford many kinds of fruit and vegetables.”

Studies at the Rowett Institute in which healthy volunteers, allowed to eat as much food as they wished – some of which had a high but well-disguised fat content – showed that volunteers would happily eat their way through a whole extra two days’ worth of calorie intake per week, their brains unaware of the fact that they had switched to an extremely high-fat diet. As a result, not surprising­ly, they quickly put on weight.

Sedentary lifestyles were also a major factor. In 2016 James estimated that the average Briton burnt between 600 and 800 calories a day fewer than in the mid-20th century. “We need better food than perhaps we have ever eaten before to prevent ‘passive’ weight gain,” he said.

In the early 1980s James was lead author of a report by the newly establishe­d National Advisory Committee on Nutrition Education advising on the need to reduce fat, sugar and salt intakes in the British diet. In 1983 The Sunday Times carried a frontpage story under the headline “Censored – a diet for life and death”, about how the report had been inexplicab­ly blocked by the DOH.

In an article published in 2021 in the Annual Review of Nutrition, James claimed that he had “discovered a civil servant secretly linking a major sugar company with a minister of health in an attempt to suppress my advocation of lower sugar intakes... I was rewarded by the then chief medical officer of the DOH telling me he had written a secret memorandum that would permanentl­y bar me from any public honours or role in any health issue.”

Though he was a reluctant media star, government foot-dragging persuaded James to go public. As well as developing and narrating an edition of the BBC’S Horizon, he presented a series examining (and improving) the food purchases of households on an inner London estate, which caused the BBC to be swamped with correspond­ence and millers and bakers to run out of brown flour.

It seemed a step forward when in 1997 the Blair government accepted proposals by James which led to the establishm­ent of a new UK Food Standards Agency, but James continued to lament the failure of successive administra­tions to implement a comprehens­ive cross-government antiobesit­y strategy. In 2016 he warned that the NHS would be bankrupted unless action was taken.

William Philip Trehearne James was born in Bala, a Welsh-speaking village in Snowdonia, on June 27 1938, the son of Jenkin James, a headmaster and Quaker who died when his son was seven, and his wife Lilian, née Shaw, a teacher.

From Ackworth School, a Quaker boarding school in Pontefract, West Yorkshire, where he excelled academical­ly, he applied to University College London Medical School, but, due to an administra­tive error, turned up for the exam a week late. Realising their error, the organisers took him to see “three old men” who asked him how he had got to London: “I explained I was on my way to Salzburg with a school group in a rebuilt old burntout Rolls-royce which I had rewired. We chatted for perhaps half an hour and then they concluded with a cheery ‘See you next October!’” The “old men” turned out to be the Nobel prize-winners Julian Huxley, AV Hill and Bernard Katz.

He trained in paediatric­s and cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y medicine and in 1965 was sent by the MRC to study malnutriti­on in Jamaica, where he developed treatments for children with severe malnutriti­on and diarrhoea and developed a lifelong interest in nutrition and diet.

After a year in the US and another year at the MRC Gastroente­rology Unit in London, he was appointed senior lecturer in nutrition at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

The commission to study the literature on obesity led to his establishi­ng a research centre at the Dunn Nutrition Unit at Cambridge. Eight years later the government appointed him director of the Rowett Research Institute.

From his arrival in 1982 he built the Institute’s reputation both at home and abroad with research for the World Health Organisati­on (WHO). In 1995 he founded the Internatio­nal Obesity Task Force (IOTF) and he went on to organise the first WHO global burden analysis of obesity, showing that it was the biggest unrecognis­ed public health problem in the world. He establishe­d the Internatio­nal Associatio­n for the Study of Obesity (now the World Obesity Federation), an NGO of which he was president from 2007 to 2014.

In a recent interview James said: “Simply helping people to lose weight is not enough because most individual­s promptly regain the weight lost, indicating that the primary causes of their condition are not being dealt with… You need many different initiative­s, at an individual, community and societal level to achieve an effective reduction in obesity rates.”

James, who listed among his hobbies in Who’s Who, “eating, preferably in France”, was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1986 and appointed CBE in 1993.

In 1961 he married Jean Moorhouse, who survives him with a son and daughter.

 ?? ?? Philip James, photograph­ed in 1991, holding olives: ‘The rubbish that people eat is atrocious and the manipulati­on of poor people is unspeakabl­e’
Philip James, photograph­ed in 1991, holding olives: ‘The rubbish that people eat is atrocious and the manipulati­on of poor people is unspeakabl­e’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom