Coventry Telegraph

Teenagers are eating our world!

MIDLAND-LED STUDY REVEALS RISK TO HEALTH AND PLANET OF KIDS’ DIET

- ELLA PICKOVER News Reporter

THE majority of British teenagers do not even eat an apple a day, a new study involving West Midlands teenagers suggests.

Adolescent­s in the UK have diets which are “unhealthy and unsustaina­ble”, according to the research.

Experts found that seven in 10 British teenagers do not even consume 100g of fruit each day – the equivalent of around one small apple.

Nine in 10 are not eating enough veg and 73% exceed the recommende­d limits of sugar consumptio­n each day, researcher­s claimed. The study, being presented at the European Congress on Obesity in the Netherland­s, set out to assess the proportion of adolescent­s who are broadly eating in line with a diet”which is said to be both healthy and sustainabl­e for the planet by reducing greenhouse gas production.

To assess teenagers’ food consumptio­n, researcher­s examined data from 942 pupils aged 11 to 15 who go to 16 schools in the West Midlands.

Pupils completed a survey on their dietary intake the day before.

Some 70% consumed less than 100g a day of fruit and 91% did not eat 200g of vegetables each day.

Most were eating more poultry and potatoes than targets set out by the diet – which suggests people should eat plant foods with small amounts of meat and fish.

The authors concluded: “This study suggests adolescent­s in the West Midlands are consuming diets which are neither healthy nor sustainabl­e.”

Study lead Dr Ankita Gupta said government­s and dietary guidelines need to acknowledg­e that a third of adolescent­s in the UK are overweight or obese.

They should “consider interventi­ons that focus on transformi­ng food systems, changing food policy and supporting diets that benefit both young people’s health and the planet”.

Dr Gupta added: “For many young people living in the UK and other western countries, eating according to the planetary health diet will entail a major change, and it will take time to change our eating habits.

“Schools are where children spend most of their time, making this a crucial setting for programmes, strategies, and policies that alter the food environmen­t by shaping the choices available and the options they choose.

“We tend to stick to the dietary habits we develop as children.”

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