WHO urges tougher food
marketing rules to curb childhood obesity
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(Globalpost/GlobalPost)
By Kate
Kelland
LONDON
(Reuters) - The marketing of unhealthy foods to children has proven
"disastrously effective", driving obesity by using cheap social media
channels to promote fat-, salt- and sugar-laden foods, the World Health
Organisation's Europe office said on Tuesday.
The
United Nations health agency called for tighter controls on such marketing,
saying tougher regulations were crucial to winning the fight against childhood
obesity.
"Children
are surrounded by adverts urging them to consume high-fat, high-sugar, high-salt
foods, even when they are in places where they should be protected, such as
schools and sports facilities," said Zsuzsanna Jakab, director of the
WHO's regional unit for Europe.
The
promotion of foods high in saturated and trans-fats, sugars and salt has for
years been recognized as a significant risk factor for obesity in children and
for diet-related chronic diseases such as heart disease and some cancers later
in life.
In a
report on food marketing, WHO Europe said the food industry increasingly uses
cheap new marketing channels such as social media and smart phone apps to
target children.
Television
remains the dominant form of advertising and a large majority of children and
adolescents watch TV on average for more than two hours a day, it said.
"Overweight
is one of the biggest public health challenges of the 21st century: all
countries are affected to varying extents, particularly in the lower
socioeconomic groups," Jakab said in a foreword to the report.
And the
picture is not improving, she added. Data from the WHO's Childhood Obesity
Surveillance Initiative show that, on average, one child in every three aged 6
to 9 years is overweight or obese.
VULNERABLE
Jakab
also said recent data suggest children become obese not just because they watch
TV instead of being active but also because of exposure to advertising and
other marketing tactics.
Leading
categories of advertised foods are soft drinks, sweetened breakfast cereals,
biscuits, sweets, snacks, ready meals and fast food outlets, the WHO report
said.
"Unfortunately,
marketing unhealthy food to children has been proven to be disastrously
effective," the report said. "Whereas adults are aware when they are
being targeted ... children are unable to distinguish, for example, between
adverts and cartoons. This makes them particularly receptive and vulnerable to
messages that lead to unhealthy choices."
WHO
Europe said that, while all 53 member states of its European region have signed
up to restrictions on the marketing of unhealthy foods to children, most rely
on general advertising regulations that do not specifically address the
promotion of high-fat, -salt or -sugar products.
More
comprehensive approaches - via either legislation, self-regulation or
co-regulation - have only been adopted in Denmark, France, Norway, Slovenia,
Spain and Sweden, it said.
(Editing
by Gareth Jones)
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