Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
The government should ban high-sugar cereals such as Coco Pops and other foods that are contributing to an obesity epidemic among British children, the shadow health secretary has urged.
Regulations limiting the amount of sugar, salt and fat in processed foods should be considered if the food industry does not take action itself, according to Labour's Andy Burnham, who has begun a consultation on how to tackle obesity.
Burnham highlighted the case of breakfast cereals, saying many aimed at children are more than one-third sugar by weight.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2013/jan/05/ban-sugary-cereals-child-obesity
These suggestions are idiotic really, everything is looked at so simplistically! I grew up eating weetabix caked in sugar, frosties, sugar puffs, bread and dripping, toast dripping with butter and goodness knows what else! So did most of my peers, and yet there was usually only one or two overweight children in the class throughout my school life. Breakfast cereals may be a factor, but banning them is not a solution - it depends on so many other things, like what they eat for the rest of the day, how active they are, what opportunities to get active are available, how adventurous their parents allow them to be, their role models and examples, their body image, the marketing they are subjected to - I would run out of computer ink if I listed it all! People are incredibly complex! 🙄
Regulations limiting the amount of sugar, salt and fat in processed foods should be considered if the food industry does not take action itself, according to Labour's Andy Burnham, who has begun a consultation on how to tackle obesity.
Burnham highlighted the case of breakfast cereals, saying many aimed at children are more than one-third sugar by weight.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2013/jan/05/ban-sugary-cereals-child-obesity
These suggestions are idiotic really, everything is looked at so simplistically! I grew up eating weetabix caked in sugar, frosties, sugar puffs, bread and dripping, toast dripping with butter and goodness knows what else! So did most of my peers, and yet there was usually only one or two overweight children in the class throughout my school life. Breakfast cereals may be a factor, but banning them is not a solution - it depends on so many other things, like what they eat for the rest of the day, how active they are, what opportunities to get active are available, how adventurous their parents allow them to be, their role models and examples, their body image, the marketing they are subjected to - I would run out of computer ink if I listed it all! People are incredibly complex! 🙄