Scottish Daily Mail

Kids so fat they need new hips

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

CHILDREN are having NHS hip replacemen­ts because they are so fat, official figures reveal.

One child aged ten to 14 and four aged 15 to 19 had the operation last year, with obesity as the main or secondary cause, according to NHS Digital.

While the figures are low, they are an increase on the two 15 to 19-year-old patients in 2015 and three in 2014.

More than four million British children and teenagers are overweight or obese, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

Some 41 per cent of five to 19-year-olds are considered to be too heavy, with experts calling it an ‘absolute crisis’.

Obese children are particular­ly at risk of a hip disease called slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE). Surgery is needed to insert a screw to stabilise the hip, and if that does not work a full hip replacemen­t often follows.

Tam Fry, chairman of the National Obesity Forum, called the figures ‘truly saddening’.

‘Although today’s numbers may appear small, they hide a near certainty that they will escalate in the years to come,’ he told The Sunday Times.

‘We must urgently focus our effort on stopping children getting fat in the first place.’

Daniel Perry, a consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool, said: ‘Though we can’t yet be sure that the obesity directly causes this [SCFE], obesity is the primary risk factor.

‘Around 500 adolescent­s in the UK suffer from this problem every year, with the majority of them being overweight or obese.’

He added: ‘In some cases the hip may be so damaged that a hip replacemen­t becomes necessary soon after the primary surgery, with many more gradually worsening, necessitat­ing a hip replacemen­t early in adulthood.’

Prime Minister Theresa May last year published a long-awaited childhood obesity strategy that ‘challenged’ the food industry to slash sugar by 20 per cent by 2020 – although critics called the plan ‘underwhelm­ing’.

Official statistics show that about a third of children are obese or overweight when they leave primary school.

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