Sunderland Echo

Campaigner are ignored

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Given the UK has one of the highest levels of obesity in Europe, the Government should be doing everything in its power to tackle the problem. Instead it has rowed back on its pledge to protect the next generation by announcing a weak and brief plan to address obesity, rather than the robust strategy it promised.

In Sunderland more than one in five children in Reception class, aged four and five, are overweight or obese. This rises to more than a third by the time they reach Year Six.

Poor diet has become a feature of our children’s lives, with junk food more readily available, and food manufactur­ers constantly targeting children with their marketing.

It is incredibly disappoint­ing that the Government has ignored the calls of food campaigner­s and health organisati­ons, including the British Medical Associatio­n and the Obesity Health Alliance, and failed to include any plans for tighter controls on marketing and promotion.

Although the Government has proposed targets for food companies to reduce the level of sugar in their products, the fact that these are voluntary, renders them pointless.

Poor diet is responsibl­e for up to 70,000 deaths a year, and has a greater impact on the NHS budget than alcohol consumptio­n, smoking or physical inactivity. The Government must act now to address the obesity epidemic that’s impacting on our children’s health and placing a huge burden on our already overstretc­hed NHS. Professor Parveen Kumar

Board of science chair British Medical Associatio­n

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