WHO Agrees to Launch
Anti-Obesity Campaign
The United Nations' health agency agreed
Saturday to launch a global campaign against obesity, blamed for
an increase in deadly chronic diseases worldwide.
The Global Strategy on Diet, Physical
Activity and Health was backed by the policy committee of the
World Health Organization's annual assembly, and its formal adoption
by the full body later in the day was a formality, diplomatic
sources said.
The plan, under negotiation for
two years, recommends people limit intakes of fats, sugar and
salt -- blamed for a surge in cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes
and some cancers.
These chronic diseases account
for nearly 60 percent of the 56.5 million deaths a year around
the world that are deemed preventable, according to the WHO, a
United Nations agency.
According to the World Heart Federation,
1.1 billion adults and 22 million children under age five are
obese, worldwide, with over-eating or poor eating habits replacing
malnutrition as a health problem in many developing nations.
Brazil, the world's largest cane
producer, led sugar producers including Cuba this week in lobbying
for softening references to sugar in the text, diplomats said.
But the group backed down after
their concerns were incorporated into the text, including a commitment
to tackling malnutrition in developing countries, they added.
Reference
Source 89
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