As many as 268 million children
aged five to 17 years may be overweight – including 91 million obese – by 2025,
according to a global estimate that suggests no policy interventions have
proven effective at changing current trends. Timed to coincide with this year’s
World Obesity Day, which is observed on October 11, researchers from World Obesity
Federation in the UK have also released data anticipating that obesity related
conditions will rise among children. In 2025, up to 12 million children will
have impaired glucose tolerance, 4 million will have type 2 diabetes, 27
million will have hypertension, and 38 million will have hepatic steatosis, or
buildup of fat in the liver, researchers found. Using data prepared by the
Global Burden of Disease collaborative for 2000 and 2013, the researchers have
estimated that by 2025 some 268 million children aged 5-17 years may be
overweight, including 91 million obese. These forecasts should sound an alarm
bell for health service managers and health professionals, who will have to
deal with this rising tide of ill health following the obesity epidemic.

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