Daily Mail

Two-for-one deals on junk food will be banned to cut obesity

- By Kate Pickles Health Reporter

TWO-fOr- One deals on junk food will be banned as part of a major crackdown on obesity.

restaurant­s, cafes and takeaways could also soon be forced to put calorie counts on their menus under the government proposals.

The shake-up includes plans to end free soft drink refills and stop energy drinks being sold to under-16s.

The proposals are expected to be unveiled tomorrow as part of the new Childhood Obesity Strategy, which aims to halve the problem by 2030.But health campaigner­s say the measures, which are expected to include tighter restrictio­ns on junk food adverts before the watershed, still do not go far enough.

As well as the ban on buy-one-get-onefree deals on junk food, it is hoped that clear nutritiona­l labelling in restaurant­s will help us make more informed choices.

Health experts say we often under-estimate the number of calories when eating out, while studies show labelling can cut calorie consumptio­n by 8 per cent.

The new measures will replace a watered- down strategy published two years ago, which was heavily criticised by health organisati­ons for not going far enough. Campaigner­s including TV chefs Hugh fearnley-Whittingst­all and Jamie Oliver have lobbied for measures such as a ban on junk food adverts before the 9pm watershed and for sweets to be moved away from check- outs. Campaigner­s also want the new strategy to include tighter restrictio­ns on supermarke­t deals and taxes on sugary milkshakes. Health experts, including the head of the nHS Simon Stevens, have warned that the UK is failing the next generation by allowing an ‘obesity timebomb’ to happen.

They warn that children are losing up to 20 years of their lives because of the failure to tackle youth obesity.The latest obesity strategy comes as the number of diabetes cases in the UK has doubled in 20 years to 3.7million, with experts warning it is the fastest growing health crisis of our time.

nearly a third of children and two in three adults in Britain are overweight or obese. This is despite hundreds of millions of pounds being poured into healthier school meals, Pe equipment and extra sports coaches.

Last week, Public Health england revealed youngsters are taking just five months to consume the amount of sugar they should be having in a year, with a fifth coming from sugary drinks. One medium- sized glass can contain double the recommende­d daily intake for seven to ten-year-olds.

Alison Tedstone, of Public Health england, said: ‘Clear and consistent informatio­n on menus at the point of choice is the bold commitment needed to help families make healthier choices and avoid obesity-related health problems.’

But Tam fry, spokesman for the national Obesity forum, described the new plan as ‘underwhelm­ing’, saying it does not live up to the ‘game-changing’ plan promised by Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt.

‘The Government has had 20 years now since obesity first became a problem to sort it out and it hasn’t done it,’ he said. ‘It’s set target after target, but the right action is not being taken.’

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