This is an argument discussing the most important health promotion issue in Newham, borough of London, about the obesity. This borough (New ham) has massive issue about healthy food promotion, where there is too many fast food shop and restaurants all around schools. Many children in the area of Newham are obese according to the new report on 29 November 2015 published Newham Recorder news. The report identified that nearly half of year sex children in Newham city are overweight. This is due to the lack of healthy food promotion to the population of Newham City. Therefore, most people in that area are overweight or obese especially school’s children because there are many chickens' shops around schools which give children the choice to go and buy very cheap and unhealthy fried chicken at lunchtime or after school. New ham city has the highest level of obesity due to the lack of healthy food. People go to the chicken shop because it is cheap, and so they …show more content…
can save money. However, this cause huge issue to the population of Newham as the new figures shows the highest proportion in Newham city compares to other boroughs of London. This evidence shows how obese children in Newham city and this is because there is less healthy food promoter; therefore, people in who lives there are not aware of the dangers of unhealthy food to their health. It leads to overweight and obesity which are causing diabetes and heart attack in long term. On other hand, teachers at schools are trying to encourage children to eat a healthy meal at school according to what Sarah Lack comment. She said that they are trying to reduce the obesity at their school by use breakfast club and an after-school lesson on a healthy meal so that children do not go to the chicken shop every day. However, this is not enough to help the students to be healthy because there is no other health promotion to promote healthy products and show its benefit to people. Moreover, people go and buy cheap unhealthy food because there are fewer fruits, vegetables, and healthy products available around schools where the most places young people and school’s children are accessing to during the school term. (food desert) Where people are unable to access healthy food, most of the food there is unhealthy. This is an important health promotion problem as they are not taking action to promote a healthy lifestyle to the society and to improve the city by increasing healthy products nearly schools and reduce the fast food shops.
According to the evidence provided by the recent record to the Guardian newspaper by Jay Rayner on the 26 October 2013, that new chicken opened just across the road near a secondary school where children will go to every day at 3pm after school and buy the chicken box stew. This is due to the poor health promotion there to encourage people to eat healthy food, they turn to buy junk food because it is cheap and fast when they are in rush. I believe that health promotion in Newham is very poor compared to other cities in London. This is due to the high level of obesity in the city. Therefore, the population of Newham city is overweight and this unhealthy according to the new figure recorded by public health England, indicated that 56.8% of the residents are over the normal body mass
index. Although nearly half of children in Newham are unhealthy because most children in there are unfit. This shows us that there are no healthy living promoting services, no promotion in the city to provide the community with a high standard of food environment. Since most of the local shops are fast food shops, people take advantage to buy but it is made with too much oil to cock and fired the chicken and chips. In this case fried chicken from chips shop is not healthy to be consumed.
We must do something about fast food products, to stop from affecting children and leading them to obesity. Is what reflect David Barboza’s article “If You Pitch It, They Will Eat.” School’s, Parent’s, Policy Makers, etc… Should take the lead in this action, by reducing many unhealthy food products from school’s, store’s, and place’s close to home.
The first step to fighting the obesity epidemic is education. The mayor of Manchester admits to her ignorance on the issue “I just don’t know a lot about obesity” (408 Haygood). Informing the mayor would be the first step to informing the town. Once the mayor is informed, she could speak out at community event and at schools. It is vital to have a
There are many causes and effects to childhood obesity. In the article" 'Extra Large, ‘Please," Alice Davies explains the growing problem of childhood obesity. At first, the writer uses an anecdote from her childhood of criticism. This anecdote forms an idea of the desires kids have and the difficulty of turning down delicious meals. Through the beginning of this article, Alice applies the past to bring forward the present cause. Furthermore, Davies inserts vivid details and obesity facts in order to show that it is a real problem in our nation. Undeniably, there are several different factors that are presented in this write-up. The lack of opportunities, electronic entertainment, and parental supervision stems from becoming obese. Currently, fast-food plays an importan...
Throughout the past years and more here recently obesity has become a fast growing problem in the United States and around the world. Since this has become such a problem certain authors are starting to take a stand in how they think the solution should be fixed. The solutions are discussed in the following articles: How Junk Food Can End Obesity by David H. Freedman and What You Eat Is Your Business by Radley Balko. Both articles have clear and distinct arguments, but the argument by Balko entices his readers and has a clear purpose and tone that allowed his article to be more effective.
This Neighbourhood Study aims to examine the demographics of Hillingdon Primary Care Trust (HPCT) such as age, gender, ethnicity, social groups in relation to the prevention of obesity. An insight into the prevalence of obesity as well as the causes and its effects shall be evaluated. Public health strategies regarding the prevention of obesity and its effects in comparison to Government strategies shall be addressed. The nurse’s role as an educator in relation to this public health issue, strategies formulated by HPCT to prevent obesity and how it focuses on other diseases associated with obesity shall be discussed. The following section gives a definition of obesity, health education and health prevention.
However, when creating fast food restaurants, the industries were not thinking about the negative effects such as obesity. Other than obesity, other harmful effects exist as well. Fast food restaurants serve unhealthy products such as greasy foods and artificial meat that lead to dietary health issues in many adults and children. A recent study showed that “Young children who are fed processed, nutrient-poor foods are likely to become unhealthy teenagers, and eventually unhealthy adults. Now twenty-three percent of teens in the U.S. are pre-diabetic or diabetic, 22% have high or borderline high LDL cholesterol levels, and 14% have hypertension or prehypertension”
David S. Ludwig (2010) warms of the severity of the childhood obesity issue and goes to explain that the “environmental factors” are promoting the unhealthy lifestyle. He also states and believes that there should be more regulation when it comes to unhealthy foods being marketed towards children. Parents are actually receiving false information about the food they are giving to children, while in their mind, they are doing the right thing. Ludwig also points out that the government is supporting processed foods and farm subsides. One major point Ludwig suggests is that cut in sport and physical activity in schools because of
Childhood obesity has been on the rise in the last couple of years. In the 1970’s childhood obesity was never a concern to the public until the number increased over the years. An alarming rate of 31% of all adults have been obese since they were children and the rates of childhood obesity don’t fall too behind with an 18% of children being obese. That makes almost half of obese adults and children. A child that is obese has a 70-80% higher chance of staying obese even through their adulthood if no action is taken. Childhood obesity is not something children are in control of, these children suffer from different outcomes since they can’t look after themselves and heavily rely on someone to aid them when they need it. These numbers can be drastically altered in a positive way by educating both children and parents about healthy, nutritious foods to consume, supplying schools with better lunch and healthier vending machines with healthy choices and promoting after school activities to keep children active and away from electronics.
How many obese children have you seen today? Obesity is one of the largest health problems Americans are currently facing. It can lead to many baleful complications, including heart disease, diabetes, sleep apnea, cancer, mobility issues, high blood pressure, bullying, and lack of self-esteem. According to the CDC, about 17% of children and adolescents aged 2-19 are obese, and 30% are overweight. In adults, around 70% are overweight and 30% are obese. Nevertheless, our nation’s public schools are continuously promoting virulent foods through its lunch programs and on-campus advertisements. Although I understand that unhealthy food is cheaper and tastier, we must remember that those foods are causing our nation’s children to become obese. Factors such as cheap unhealthy foods in school lunches, junk food ads in schools, and teachers eating pernicious foods in class are causing more and more children to make the easy choice, the unhealthy choice. Obesity is a growing epidemic in the U.S, one that we need to promptly eradicate.
The human body requires the intake of food in order to function properly. The foods that we decide to eat has an effect on the ability to use are mind, are strength, and even how prone we are to getting sick or hurt. Eating to much of the wrong foods, with little or no exercise can cause the silent but deadly epidemic of obesity in children and in teens. In the past, obesity was just known as a condition that only affected adults. In this generation the youths are becoming more prone to obesity. In 1995 an average of 18 million children all around the world was categorized as being overweight (Rabbitt, Aifric, and Imelda Coyne 731). In a Childhood Obesity Interventions article it says that 17% (12.5 million) of children in the United States is considered to be obese (Rabbitt, Aifric, and Imelda Coyne 731). This outrageous number of overweight children in the world is almost tripled in 2010, where 43 million children under 5 are considered to be overweight (Rabbitt, Aifric, and Imelda Coyne 731). Another staggering statistic is more than 60% percent of the children that are classified as overweight before they reach puberty, will be overweight as they become adults (Rabbitt, Aifric, and Imelda Coyne 731). This leads us to the most stifling fact of there being 2.8 million people in the world that die from being overweight or obese each year (Rabbitt, Aifric, and Imelda Coyne 731). These shocking statistics show how dangerous obesity really is, and should urge everyone to fight against this epidemic.
However, there is more at stake here than what these two groups ultimately believe to be true. The percentage of obese children in the United States has risen from 5% in 1980 to almost 20% in 2012. Factors such as food choices and fitness levels are contributing greatly to this problem. Obese children eventually become obese adults and bring along with them many adverse medical conditions. These medical conditions such as diabetes are known to be severe and place a shorter life expectancy on the people it affects. Ultimately, what is at stake here is childhood obesity is on the rise in the United States due to people’s failure to eat the proper foods and as a result of children followin...
The causes of over-weight and obese children/adolescents cardiovascular dieses, diabetes, and depression. Obesity is right next to smoking on the most preventable death. The fast-food restaurant heightens the intake of calories per meal. The causes of the obesity are extraordinary. The worst part of it all is that its preventable. Its not just children that are making themselves obese it’s also got to be the guardians. Children can’t walk into their nearest McDonalds and order themselves food and pay.
It is said that fast food advertising is linked to rising childhood and teen obesity. The childhood obesity epidemic is a serious public health problem that increases morbidity, morality, and has substantial long-term economic and social costs (opposing viewpoints). Approximately 20% of our youth are now overweight with obesity rates in preschool age children increasing at alarming speed (opposing viewpoints). U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona said, “obesity is the fastest-growing cause of illness and death in the United States.” When I read this I was shocked. This is something that can change, but its up to ourselves to make that commitment. No one else has the power to do so but us. Did you know that treating obesity-related problems cost Americans $117 billion annually, that’s $420 per person (CQ Researcher).
One the biggest problems we deal with today, especially in America is obesity. More specifically our younger generation. The number of obese children has risen dramatically in the last couple decades and doesn’t seem to be getting any better. With fast food restaurants popping up around every corner it’s hard not to see why we are a fat country and why our children will grow up to be obese. But who is to blame for this rise in obesity with in our young children, the parent? The fast food chains? Society in general? In the past years we seen a shift in how younger people interact with one another, from spending the day outside and playing to staying at home starring at a television all day. The impact of childhood obesity doesn’t just impact the lives of them but of everyone as it is responsible for around 14.1 billion dollars in direct medical costs ("McDonald’s Shareholder Proposal No. 7." xx-xx). The way we treat our children has also taken a dramatic change as well in the way we discipline them and allow them to engage one another in social situation. All these impact the problems that we are dealing with today when it comes to obesity in young children. But together we can help change how children grew up and keep them healthy and living longer lives.
We all know it is no secret that junk food makes you fat, but studies have shown that over the past ten years, obesity has doubled to 8.5 percent among six year olds and trebled to an astonishing 15 percent among 15 year olds. If we do not do anything about it then this generation of children could be the first to live shorter lives than their parents. (Dame Suzi Leather, the Daily Mail 1, page 2)