dimecres, 2 de gener del 2019

Average 10-year-old has eaten 18 years' worth of sugar by Sarah Boseley


Sugar

Average 10-year-old has eaten 18 years' worth of sugar

PHE launches campaign to persuade parents to reduce sugar in their children’s diets
Worth of: The amount of


Sarah Boseley Health editor
Wed 2 Jan 2019 07.01 GMT

The average 10-year-old has consumed as much sugar in their lifetime as the recommended limit for an 18-year-old, according to Public Health England (PHE), which is warning of serious implications for obesity and health.

Children are consuming the equivalent of eight excess sugar cubes a day, or 2,800 a year, says PHE, which has launched a new healthy eating campaign, Change4Life . National guidance recommends no more than five or six sugar cubes (20g-24g) a day for children aged four to 10.

One-third of children are overweight or obese at the age of 10 and 4.2% are severely obese in year six at school. Obese children often become obese adults, at risk of heart attacks, strokes and type 2 diabetes.
Stroke: If someone has a stroke, a blood vessel in their brain bursts or becomes blocked, which may kill them or make them unable to move one side of their body.

The PHE campaign will urge parents to cut the amount of sugar in their families’ diet by switching to lower-sugar drinks, cereals and yoghurts. PHE attempts to persuade the food industry to reformulate the products available in supermarkets have had limited success.

The organisation had called for a 20% reduction in sugar content by 2020, and a 5% cut in the first year, ending April 2018, but a report in May said manufacturers and supermarkets had managed only 2%. Yoghurts, breakfast cereals and sweet spreads were the only food groups to achieve a 5% reduction.
Spread: Spread is a soft food which is put on bread.(i.e. Nutella)

The campaign emphasises breakfast cereals and yoghurts, together with sugary drinks, where reformulation is happening because of the sugar tax. But not all products in those categories have had their sugar content lowered.

PHE wants families to switch to those that have, and it rewarded some of the companies that have made significant sugar cuts with a mention. Nestlé Shredded Wheat, Nestlé Low Sugar Oat Cheerios, Petits Filous and Soreen malt loaf are some of the brands that will carry a Change4Life “good choice” badge in shops.
Malt loaf: Is a kind of malted bread. The Soreen malt loaf has a pie aspect.

“Children are consuming too much sugar, but parents can take action now to prevent this building up over the years,” said Dr Alison Tedstone, PHE’s chief nutritionist. “To make this easier for busy families, Change4Life is offering a straightforward solution – by making simple swaps each day, children can have healthier versions of everyday foods and drinks, while significantly reducing their sugar intake.”
Straightforward: Easy to do or understand
Swap: If you swap one thing for another, you remove the first thing and replace it with the second, or you stop doing the first thing and start doing the second.

The Obesity Health Alliance, an umbrella group that includes charities and medical organisations, said more urgent action than messages on swapping high-sugar foods for low-sugar alternatives was needed.

“Today’s children are growing up in obesogenic environments, bombarded by adverts and promotions for junk food online, on TV and in our supermarkets,” said Caroline Cerny, the alliance lead.

“Government proposals to restrict junk-food marketing, tackle price- and place-based promotions and ensure calorie labelling in cafes and restaurants will, if fully implemented, make progress towards reversing our current worrying obesity trends. But the food industry must also do their bit, cutting sugar levels from their products in line with government’s reformulation programme. It is only through concerted action at all levels that we can ensure a healthier future for this country’s children.”
Tackle: If you tackle a difficult problem or task, you deal with it in a very determined or efficient way.

PHE wants families to choose lower-sugar yoghurts (cutting six cubes to three), swap sugary drinks for no added-sugar drinks (two cubes to half a cube) and frosted or chocolate cereal for something lower in sugar (three cubes to half a cube per bowl). This could cut a child’s sugar intake by 2,500 cubes a year, it says.

Swapping chocolate, puddings, sweets, cakes and pastries for healthier options such as malt loaf, sugar-free jellies, lower-sugar custards and rice puddings would reduce their intake further, the organisation says.
Jelly: Jelly is a transparent, usually coloured food that is eaten as a dessert. It is made from gelatine, fruit juice, and sugar.

Kawther Hashem, a researcher at Action on Sugar based at Queen Mary University of London, said: “Encouraging parents to halve their children’s sugar intake from everyday food and drink products is applaudable and we fully support the campaign.

“However, if we are to curb the UK’s escalating childhood obesity epidemic then the government must enforce more hard-hitting tactics such as mandatory uniform coloured coded labelling on front of packs, product reformulation with a 50% reduction in sugar across all products, a tax on confectionery and ensure that only healthy products are marketed and advertised.”

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