Western Mail

HEALTH NOTES

-

CHILD OBESITY TIMEBOMB

MORE than 22,000 out of 556,000 10 to 11-year-olds in primary school are severely obese, nearly twice the number of reception children aged four and five who are dangerousl­y overweight, new Local Government Associatio­n analysis shows.

Now the LGA, which represents 370 councils in England and Wales, warns severe child obesity rates are contributi­ng to a “multi-billion pound ill-health time bomb”.

Severe obesity can shorten a person’s life by 10 years – an equivalent loss to the effects of lifelong smoking.

GENETIC RISK FOR DRINKERS

SCIENTISTS say regular boozers risk heart failure if they have a faulty gene – even if they drink moderately.

They found alcohol can accelerate cardiac problems in drinkers with a protein called titin carried by one in 100 people – leading to a type of heart failure called dilated cardiomyop­athy.

None of the 716 patients in the study drank heavily. Scientists found even moderately increased alcohol affected heart pumping power in patients with the faulty gene. Report co-author Dr Paul Barton said: “Alcohol and the heart have a complicate­d relationsh­ip.”

ADS ‘SEEK TO HIJACK’ KIDS’ BRAINS

JUNK food companies are looking at ways adverts can “hijack” children’s brains.

That’s the claim by a top obesity campaigner after firms employed experts in so-called neuromarke­ting to analyse brain scans and see how unconsciou­s decisions are made to eat one snack rather than another.

Expert Kelly Brownell, of Duke University in North Carolina, said: “I would be interested to see what effects are produced by just looking at advertisin­g. Does food marketing hijack the brain? There is interestin­g neuroscien­tific research looking at the impact of sugar on the brain.”

 ??  ?? New child obesity stats are startling
New child obesity stats are startling
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom