The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA’s kids in battle of the bulge

RISK OF CHRONIC DISEASE: 1.6 MILLION SOUTH AFRICAN CHILDREN ARE OBESE – STUDY

- Citizen reporter

Sugary drinks such as sodas and fruit juices are some of main culprits.

The rising obesity rate among South African youth is crippling their ability to live healthy lives and fully enjoy their youth as more and more develop life-threatenin­g chronic diseases like type 2 diabetes.

A recent research report published in the New England Medical Journal reveals that 1.6 million South African children are considered obese, in addition to 10 million adults. South Africa has the highest obesity rates for women in Africa.

The study, which measured overweight and obesity trends between 1990 and 2015 in close to 200 countries worldwide, found that 107 million children are living with obesity globally. While this figure is lower than that what was

seen among adults (603 million), children and teenagers are gaining weight at a much faster rate.

A significan­t proportion of many children’s daily calorie intake is sugary drinks like sodas and sweetened fruit juices. Many parents stock the beverages during regular grocery shopping trips to put them in their kids’ school lunch bags and to have with dinner at the end of each day.

The escalating weight of youth puts them at greater risk of developing other noncommuni­cable diseases like those related to the cardiovasc­ular and renal system, as well as several cancers later in life. These complicate­d, life-altering

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