Public Health Policy Surrounding Obesity in the UK
Health problems related to obesity in the United Kingdom (UK) cost the National Health Service (NHS) more than £5 Billion a year. In England alone more than 61.9% adults and 28% of children are classified as overweight or obese (DoH 2015) increasing their risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease and certain types of cancer. The UK Government are taking a multifaceted approach to empowering people to make healthier choices encouraging people to be more active and to eat and drink more healthily (DoH 2015).
Health problems related to obesity in the United Kingdom (UK) cost the National Health Service (NHS) more than £5 Billion a year. In England alone more than 61.9% adults and 28% of children are classified as overweight or obese (DoH 2015) increasing their risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease and certain types of cancer. The UK Government are taking a multifaceted approach to empowering people to make healthier choices encouraging people to be more active and to eat and drink more healthily (DoH 2015).
The Foresight Report (2007)
identified worrying figures and predication's about obesity rates in the UK
suggesting that by 2050 60% of men and 50% of women could be clinically obese
and has the potential to cripple the NHS with a staggering £45.5 billion a
year. They recommended approaching this from multiple levels including
personal, family, community and nationally.
The Government produced a
white paper called Healthy Lives Healthy People (DoH 2010) which sets out to
tackle the issues surrounding obesity from a whole society perspective,
encouraging individuals, communities and industry to work together to improve
the health of the nation. In response to this white paper a number of actions
were undertaken to address the issues raised (DoH 2010).
Change4Life is a public
health campaign seeking to tackle obesity by encouraging people to ‘eat well,
move more, live longer’ (DoH 2009). There overall aim is to help inspire a wide
group of people including the NHS, government bodies, charities, schools and
community leader to make the health and wellbeing of individuals and families
top of their priority list. Originally aimed at parents with children the
campaign now targets adults with campaigns about physical activity and reducing
alcohol intake. It recognisable branding with cartoon figures and bright yellow
background mean it is easily identifiable when advertising both in print and on
television (DoH 2009). The Change4life website has many resources available
from the following link Change4Life Resources.
The Public Health
Responsibility Deal (PHRD) is a strategy published in March 2011, following the
release of the White Paper. The PHRD recognises that the cost of ill health is
ever increasing and that in order to achieve positive results a more complex
approach to public health is needed (DoH 2011). It suggests that as a nation we
aspire to achieve good health and that although we are aware that eating and drinking
more healthily, increasing physical activity and having access to adequate
health support at work will increase our quality of life, we persist in
behaviours that undermine this (DoH 2011).
The Deal encourages
businesses to voluntarily ‘sign up’ to the Deal and outline pledges to help
achieve the overall core commitments. This voluntary approach echoes the points
raised in the White Paper suggesting that the Government aims to use a less
intrusive approach in order to achieve the desired effect without resorting to
government legislation
Despite these strategies and
campaigns the levels of obesity remain the same. In order to tackle the issue
and to reduce the estimated 2050 statistics a more holistic approach to obesity
need to be undertaken one that uses behaviour change techniques and
multidisplinary teams.
Public
health policy surrounding obesity in Malta
Ever since the obesity epidemic
became a worldwide problem, Malta has suffered along with the rest of the
world. In fact, Malta has some of the highest rates of overweight and obesity
in Europe.
Figure 1:
Age-standardized prevalence estimates for overweight and obesity in adults aged
18 years and over, 2014
As can be seen from the above figure
(Figure 1), Maltese adults were the third most overweight and obese of all
European countries in 2014, after Andorra and Turkey (WHO, 2015). A study published
in 2014 by Decelis et al., showed that 20.4% of 10 to 11-year-old Maltese
children were overweight and another 14.2% were obese in 2012 (Decelis et al.,
2014).
The Healthy Weight for Life Strategy
was developed in 2012 and has an eight-year time frame (2012-2020). Its overall
aim is to curb and reverse the growing proportion of overweight and obese
children and adults in the population in order to reduce the health, social and
economic consequences of excess body weight. This requires an inter-ministerial
and multi-sectorial approach, so that changes are made to the living
environment, which shift it from one that promotes weight gain (obesogenic) to
one that promotes healthy choices and a healthy weight for all. In order to
promote healthy eating, several priority areas for action were identified,
highlighting the importance of involving stakeholders, educating consumers,
promoting breastfeeding, supporting pregnant women and new mothers, supporting
families of school-age children to provide the younger generation with
healthier food, regulating advertising of unhealthy foods directed at children
and supporting schools to implement healthy eating, among many others.
A Food and Nutrition Policy and
Action Plan for Malta was also developed in 2015. Its aims are to be reached by
2020 so it spans 5 years in total. It encompasses several areas for action
including five priority action areas which are; to increase the information
about the food and nutrition action plan to all stakeholders, to improve the
availability and accessibility of drinking water in schools, to increase the
number of mothers who exclusively breastfeed up to six months, to reduce the
availability and intake of foods high in fat,
sugar, and salt in schools and to develop a comprehensive surveillance
and monitoring system on food consumption.
New draft guidelines have been issued by the Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Directorate (Figure 2 below). They will be consolidated when the first nationwide dietary survey is planned to be completed sometime in 2016 (Food-based dietary guidelines Malta, FAO).
Figure 2: The Healthy Plate as endorsed by the
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Department in 2015 Source: Health Promotion and Disease
Prevention Directorate, Malta
A National Food Consumption Survey,
which is taking place right now, is expected to be finished by the end of 2016.
It covers a larger proportion of the Maltese population in order to be
representative, and asks detailed questions to each interviewee. It includes
weight, height and waist circumference measurement, a detailed 24-hour recall
with portion sizes and a food frequency questionnaire. This survey is expected
to show a clearer picture of what the Maltese typical diet consists of.
Apart from this survey, other
initiatives are being taken by the Ministry of Energy and Health to collect
enough information about Maltese health in order to form proper dietary
guidance at all age groups. For example; The Body-Mass Index (BMI), Bags and
Backs study will measure the weight and height of all Maltese school children
to determine the rate of childhood overweight and obesity.
References
Department of Health (2009)
Change4life marketing strategy [online] available from < http://www.nhs.uk/change4life/supporter-resources/downloads/change4life_marketing%20strategy_april09.pdf>
[March 2016
Department of Health
(2010) Healthy Lives, Healthy People [white
paper] London: Stationary Office (Cm7985)
Department of Health (2011)
The Public Health Responsibility Deal [online] available at
<https://responsibilitydeal.dh.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/The-Public-Health-Responsibility-Deal-March-20111.pdf>
[1 March 2016].
Department of Health (2015)
Policy Paper 2010 to 2015 government policy: Obesity and Healthy eating
[online] available from < https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/2010-to-2015-government-policy-obesity-and-healthy-eating/2010-to-2015-government-policy-obesity-and-healthy-eating>
[March 2016]
King, D. (2007) Foresight
report on obesity. The Lancet, 370(9601), 1754
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Directorate. (2012). A Healthy Weight for Life: A National Strategy for Malta 2012-2020. Superintendence of Public Health, Valletta, Malta
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Directorate. (2015). Food and Nutrition Policy and Action Plan for Malta 2015–2020. Superintendence of Public Health, Valletta, Malta
FAO. Food-based dietary guidelines - Malta. Retrieved from http://www.fao.org/nutrition/education/food-based-dietary-guidelines/regions/countries/malta/en/
World Health Organization. (2015). The European health report - Targets and beyond, reaching new frontiers in evidence.
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Directorate. (2012). A Healthy Weight for Life: A National Strategy for Malta 2012-2020. Superintendence of Public Health, Valletta, Malta
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Directorate. (2015). Food and Nutrition Policy and Action Plan for Malta 2015–2020. Superintendence of Public Health, Valletta, Malta
FAO. Food-based dietary guidelines - Malta. Retrieved from http://www.fao.org/nutrition/education/food-based-dietary-guidelines/regions/countries/malta/en/
World Health Organization. (2015). The European health report - Targets and beyond, reaching new frontiers in evidence.
It will be interesting to see how the nutritional survey results for Malta compare to the UK results. Hopefully there will be some direct comparators such as proportions of foods eaten outside the home and the number of portions of fruit and vegetables consumed per day.
ReplyDeleteI like that the Maltese Eatwell plate has separate sections for fruits and vegetables- this avoids any confusion and demonstrates that vegetables should ideally be consumed more than fruits.
Great blog. Interesting to hear about the diet survey currently being undertaken in Malta at the moment. I agree with Hannah - I like that the Maltese plate shows vegetables separate to fruits. Also that the fats and oils appear to contain the 'healthier' fats rather than promote the energy dense processed foods and snacks.
ReplyDeleteIt is always shocking to me how much money is invested in health yearly by Maltese government, but the fact that health is also heavily invested in in the UK is also shocking. It seems that both countries invest a lot in health however the general health of both populations seems to be either remaining as bad or getting worse rather than improving.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to be common that policies that were initially intended for children are now also being implemented in adolescents and adults, such as the Change4Life campaign. It would be good to compare the Eatwell plate used in Malta with one similar in the UK.
Tasz:
ReplyDeleteThe overweight and obesity rates in the UK are staggering for adults and I find it difficult to comprehend that almost a third of children are overweight or obese. I think that there is a good chance that we will reach Forsight’s predicted percentages of obesity for 2050 earlier and that quite frankly the NHS won’t be able to handle it.
Changeforlife has become such a recognisable health brand. But I’d really like it to have more of an online presence so it can reach younger audiences and help slow down those Forsight predictions coming to fruition.
I’d really like to see more of the Healthy Weight for Life Strategy and see how it compares to UK policies.
Malta’s Healthy Plate is very similar to the Eatwell Plate particularly the one on our new Eatwell Guide (a revised version of the Eatwell Plate)
Sophie:
With regards to the Maltese scenario, it was interesting to note that Malta came in third place for the overweight and obesity rates in all of Europe in 2015. The fact that Malta is trying to target the decrease of these rates by developing ‘The healthy Weight for Life Strategy 2012-2020’ and the ‘Food and Nutrition Action Plan 2015-2020’ shows that there is willingness to change. It was also very interesting to note that currently a ‘National Food Consumption Survey’ is being carried out so as to provide a good idea of what foods form part of the Maltese diet.
Great read!!