среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

Fed: Subsidise fresh food to fight obesity: experts


AAP General News (Australia)
08-15-2006
Fed: Subsidise fresh food to fight obesity: experts

By Tamara McLean, National Medical Writer

SYDNEY, Aug 15 AAP - Fruit and vegetables should be subsidised to cut fresh food prices
and help overcome "tragic" new obesity rates in Australian kids, experts say.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has released research showing Australia is the
only country in the world where childhood obesity rates have overtaken adult rates.

The number of overweight and obese children has doubled since 1985, with 23 per cent
of all Australians under 16 now fitting into the two categories.

Obesity experts Professor Ian Caterson from Sydney University and Paul Zimmet from
Monash University have labelled the figures a tragedy for Australia.

Prof Caterson, who will address the Chronic Diseases Summit in Canberra tomorrow, said
he was particularly concerned by statistics showing people aged 20 to 35 were gaining
weight the fastest.

"Our worry is that if our kids are getting fat quicker and people in their 20s to 30s
are getting fat faster (than the previous generation), when they're middle aged we're
going to have a real problem," he told AAP.

The academics support calls by US-based WHO researcher Professor Barry Popkin to institute
a so-called calorie tax on manufacturers to lift the price of unhealthy food.

But they said it may be even more effective to subsidise fresh food to make fruit and
vegetables cheaper.

"Over the last few years, the things we want people to eat have gone up in price more
than processed food," Prof Caterson said.

"So if we make them cheaper, we're rewarding people for eating the right things rather
than punishing them for eating the wrong things."

He said while eating habits were largely ingrained, research had proved that price
affects what people buy.

One study showed that halving the price of apples boosted sales three fold.

Prices would need to come down substantially through subsidies offered either to growers,
transporters or supermarkets by both state and federal governments, Prof Caterson said.

The move would bring the price of fresh produce back into line with processed foods
and get fruit and vegetables to people quicker and fresher.

The experts will tackle Australia's childhood obesity epidemic at the International
Congress on Obesity in Sydney next month.

"We live in an affluent society and Australian children are now suffering from 'affluenza',"

Prof Caterson said.

"Preventing obesity is a better way of reducing chronic disease and simpler because
you can do it with eating and lifestyle intervention."

AAP tam/sp

KEYWORD: OBESITY SUBSIDIES

) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

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