Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts

Friday, 24 November 2017

It's A Fact. We're Fat.

BY JESSICA ROUSE

It's a fact. Australians are getting fatter.

The latest research from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare has found nearly 70 per cent of people living in the Hunter New England and Central Coast health regions are classified as being overweight or obese.

The figure is above the national average of 63 per cent. Put another way, 1 in 3 adults are overweight and not obese, and 1 in 4 adults are obese.

Nutrition and dietetics professor Clare Collins from the University of Newcastle said there is a difference between being obese and being overweight based on your Body Mass Index (BMI), but either way it's not good.

"Essentially the higher your BMI, the more likely it is that you're carrying excess body fat particularly around your waist and around your body organs and its that type of excess body fat that's related to higher risks of diabetes, heart disease and some cancers."

The statistics also look at overweight and obesity in children and show 1 in 4 Australian children and adolescents aged between 2 - 17 years old were overweight or obese.

Professor Clare Collins said the statistics are alarming and it should be a wake up call for more to be done to stop the statistics going up even more.

"These statistics are alarming, they're continuing to go up; it tells you that we're not doing enough to change the food environment so that basically its better for your health and your hip pocket to eat more healthily,"

"It needs to be a call to action that we change the food environment, that we work together across all sectors so the health and wellbeing of people here in the Hunter and the central coast is the thing that drives us to making it better," said Claire.


Tuesday, 7 March 2017

The Hunter is an obesity 'hot spot'

BY JESSICA ROUSE

The Hunter has been labelled as an obesity 'hot spot' above the state's average, as the obesity crisis increases across Australia

Kidney Health Australia released a one off report yesterday revealing the link between obesity and what is known as the silent killer: chronic kidney disease.

The Hunter New England and Central Coast region was shown to have an obesity rate of 68 per cent and a 12 per cent rate of chronic kidney disease. Both statistics are well above the state average of 63 per cent for obesity, and 10 per cent for kidney disease.

Medical Advisor and Board Member for Kidney Health Australia Jonathon Craig, says no matter your age now, the older you get the greater chance you have of becoming a statistic of obesity and kidney disease.

"As people get older, rates of obesity increase which is broadly consistent with what's happening in chronic kidney disease where the rates increase over time and are particularly prevalent in those aged over 60 or more."

According to the report, overweight people are 1.5 times more likely to develop kidney disease and for obese people the rate drastically doubles.

Kidney Health Australia CEO Mikaela Stafrace says "in obese people the kidneys have to work harder, filtering more blood than normal," and this increase in the kidney's function "can damage the kidneys - effectively shutting them down - and cause kidney disease".