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Childhood obesity strategy is not good enough

This opinion piece is over 7 years old
 

Elli Kontorravdis on the failings of the government's plan and what must be done to effectively tackle childhood obesity

The Westminster government’s much delayed childhood obesity strategy was released this week to bitter disappointment.

Public health and children’s organisations broadly agree that the plan will fail a generation of children – and we absolutely agree.

Elli Kontorravdis

Supermarkets have dominated the food scene – and with great power must come great responsibility

Elli Kontorravdis

The strategy is this: the introduction of a levy on sugar-sweetened beverages, and, er – that’s pretty much it. The Childhood Obesity Strategy picks on one slither of the problem-pie and makes no strategic attempts at tackling the obesogenic food environment.

There’s nothing to regulate the promotion and advertising of unhealthy foods, nothing on planning controls to tackle the ubiquity of unhealthy foods – which we know are worryingly concentrated in close proximity to schools and areas of multiple deprivation – and, most importantly, the strategy does nothing to increase access to healthy foods.

The scale of the problem is serious: 1/3 of school children in the UK are overweight or obese, and this poses a number of life-long challenges to health and well-being. And yet this strategy is essentially business as usual; relying on voluntary action from the food industry which has been hugely unsuccessful to date.

Last year Nourish proposed that the Scottish Government take the lead in comprehensive action including through the introduction of a retailer’s levy.

This would be a levy on large retailers, primarily supermarkets, for the difference between the composition of their sales against dietary reference values. This could be easily calculated using existing data on sales, and would incentivise supermarkets to promote healthy foods – thereby increasing accessibility.

Supermarkets have dominated the food scene – they’re as ubiquitous as unhealthy food – and with great power must come great responsibility.

Children have a right to a health and adequate nutrition, and they also have a right to be meaningfully heard throughout the process. We hope Holyrood will act where Westminster has once again embarrassingly failed.

Elli Kontorravdis is an advocacy manager at Nourish Scotland.