Obesity ‘kills more than 9,000 Britons a year’
By Kate Devlin, Medical Correspondent Daily Telegraph - 10/11/08
Obesity kills more than 9,000 people a year, Alan Johnson warned as he launched a national campaign to fight the crisis. The Health Secretary announced plans for nine new “healthy towns” to share £30 million of investment designed to change attitudes and eating habits.
The announcement is the first stage of a new drive to encourage people to lose weight and become healthier, called Change4Life.
Experts predict that if trends continue the growing obesity problem could lead to rapid rises in the rates of life-threatening diseases like diabetes and cancer.
Last year, the Government-commissioned Foresight report warned that unless urgent action was taken half of all Britons could be obese by 2050.
Earlier this year Mr Johnson warned that heavily overweight schoolchildren faced dying eleven years younger than their slimmer classmates.
Announcing the new scheme he said: “Obesity is the biggest health challenge we face - every year 9,000 people die prematurely and a third of 11 and 12-year-olds are overweight.”
The aim of the new scheme was to create a “healthy England”, he added.









