More
people than ever in the Netherlands are morbidly obese despite a fall in the
overall obesity rate, according to latest official figures.
Around 100,000
people, or 0.9 per cent of the population, are classed as having the most
severe of the three levels of obesity. Overall 14.2% of people are obese, two
and a half times the rate at the beginning of the 1980s, the nationalstatistics agency CBS said.
Despite the increase the Netherlands has one of the
lowest levels of obesity in Europe, with only Italy and Romania below the Dutch
level of 13% in 2014, the last year for which comparative figures are
available. The European Union average is 17%.
Women are more likely than men to
be clinically obese, with 14.7% of women and 12.7% of men having a form of
obesity. Obesity is also more prevalent among older people, with almost a fifth
of people aged between 65 and 75 classed as obese. Among people under 30 the
proportion is three times smaller (6.7%).
A further 36% of the population is
deemed to be overweight but not obese, meaning nearly half of all Dutch people
are over the healthy weight limit. Obesity is defined as having a body mass
index (BMI) of more than 30, while anyone with a BMI above 25 is overweight.
Surgeon Eric Hazebroek told the Radio 1 Journaal that although obesity was
increasingly recognised as a chronic illness caused by a combination of
hereditary and lifestyle factors, more could be done to reduce the problem.
‘People should be better informed in supermarkets about the amount of sugar in
products. Schools and sports club canteens should also pay more attention to
this issue,’ he said.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.