When we think of India and nutrition, we typically conjure up images of severely malnourished, starving, bone-hungry children. Whether by forced stereotypes or not, we fail to notice and pay serious attention to the other side of malnutrition – obesity.
Currently, obese children around the world account for 150 million. This seems pretty steep already, but that number is supposed to rise to 250 million by 2030, according to a report in The Guardian that quotes a study by the World Obesity Federation.
FIT spoke to Dr Ajay Kriplani, director and head of the department for gastrointestinal and metabolic surgery at Fortis Memorial Research Institute to investigate why exactly childhood obesity is a very big deal in India.
Childhood obesity then is like a pandora's box of illnesses waiting to happen at younger and younger ages. Instances of heart attacks in your teens and diabetes before you are 20 are rising at a scary rate in India.
The WOF report titled the Global Atlas on Childhood Obesity outlined each country’s childhood obesity risk rate and detailed factors such as the current and predicted percentage of obese infants, adolescents, and teenagers and further divided this by gender.
It predicted that in India 2030 the percentage of children aged 5-9 with obesity would be 10.8% or approximately 12.6 million; whereas 6.2% or 14.7 million children aged 10-19 were predicted to be obese.
This totaled to a predicted 27.4 million obese children aged 5-19 in the India of 2030.
Obesity is a complicated disease that sneaks in almost undetected. But Dr Kriplani explains that on top of the increased risk of cardiovascular diseases at an earlier rate, there would also be a psychological impact.
He added that obesity could create mental health issues in young children as “obese children are more prone to depression as a result of bullying and social pressure.”
According to the WHO, “obesity is one of today’s most blatantly visible – yet most neglected – public health problems.”
The WOF report also studied the solutions to childhood obesity, and if there were any current policies specifically to reduce this.
Each country was assessed for three types of policies:
For this, India scored 2/3 as we have policies to reduce physical inactivity and to reduce an unhealthy diet. However, a crucial policy is missing - one that monitors and controls the marketing of foods to children.
This policy focusses on the supply side of the issue and targets businesses and curbs the relentless advertising of junk food to vulnerable and easily tempted children.
Dr Kriplani noted that, “Unhealthy food is delicious of course, and we are easily tempted. There needs to be more focus on regulating the intake.”
Noting that obesity is mostly an urban problem, he added than in urban areas, especially in India’s metros, most parents are both working. This means that it is often (understandably) harder for them to regulate their children’s food.
Beyond schools and parents though, policy-makers need to step in world-over to seriously address childhood obesity because while chubbiness may be adorable on an infant, childhood obesity is no laughing matter.
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