Evidence from CLS cohort studies underpins Government’s Child Obesity Strategy
Evidence from the 1958, 1970 and millennium cohort studies has underpinned the Government’s Child Obesity Strategy, released today.
Research published in 2015 – believed to be the first of its kind – tracked increases in body mass index (BMI) for more than 56,000 people born in the UK from 1946 to 2001 who are being tracked by five longitudinal studies, including those based at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies.
The findings showed that children born since 1990 are up to three times more likely than older generations to be overweight or obese by age 10.
Since 1946, every generation has been heavier than the previous one – and worryingly, it is the most overweight people who are becoming even heavier. For example, the heaviest 2 per cent of people born in 1946 had a BMI of around 20 by the age of 11, compared to 27 for the most obese children born at the turn of the century.
People are also becoming overweight or obese at an increasingly younger age. Half the men of the 1946 generation were overweight by the time they were 41 years old, compared to age 30 for men born in 1970. Half the women born in 1946 were overweight by age 48, compared to 41 for the 1970 generation.
Other research underpinning the strategy, based on the Millennium Cohort Study, has shown that 5-year-olds from the poorest households are twice as likely to be obese compared to children from better-off homes. By age 11, they were almost three times as likely to be dangerously overweight.
MCS research has also been used to justify specific measures outlined in the strategy. A study released earlier this year found that taking part in organised sports outside of school improves children’s educational attainment. The Government’s strategy emphasises the importance for children getting a least an hour of physical activity every day, and includes measures to support school sports.
But the Government has been heavily criticised for what have been called ‘weak’ efforts to act on the evidence. One of the most controversial initiatives is a voluntary target for manufacturers to cut sugar in children’s food and drink by 20 per cent over the next four years. Reductions in sugar content will be monitored by Public Health England.
Funding for school sports and breakfast clubs will be boosted from revenues of the so-called ‘sugar tax’ on sweetened drinks that comes into force in 2018.
The Obesity Health Alliance, a coalition of 33 charities, medical royal colleges and campaign groups, said the plan fell “disappointingly short of what is needed”, with some anticipated measures “significantly watered down or removed entirely”.
Read the full Child Obesity Strategy
Childhood obesity: a plan for action was published in August 2016 by the Department of Health and a consortium of other government departments.
Coverage of the Child Obesity Strategy
BBC: Childhood obesity: Doctors criticise ‘weak’ government strategy
Guardian: Childhood obesity: UK’s ‘inexcusable’ strategy is wasted opportunity, say experts
Financial Times: Watered-down childhood obesity strategy under fire
Daily Mail: Campaigners blast Government over ‘watered-down’ strategy on childhood obesity
New Scientist: Childhood obesity strategy stops short of banning junk food ads
Read more about the research cited in the strategy
Child obesity risk increases almost three-fold in five generations
Poorer children nearly three times as likely to be obese, new study finds
Out of school activities improve children’s educational attainment, study reveals