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- Ontario Doctors Urge Junk Food Warning Labels and Taxes
- Unhealthy foods should be taxed the same way tobacco is as part of an effort to battle childhood
- obesity, Ontario doctors say.
- The recommendation is part of an Ontario Medical Association (OMA) campaign launched Tuesday.
- The OMA says three-quarters of overweight children will remain so in adulthood, with health effects
- ranging from diabetes to certain types of cancer and heart disease.
- "If we don't start taking immediate action now, our health-care system will soon be overwhelmed by
- the demands of a completely preventable complication associated with obesity," said OMA President
- Dr. Doug Weir.
- The group suggests that the province introduce policies including:
- - Increasing taxes on junk food and decreasing taxes on healthy foods.
- - Restricting marketing of fatty and sugary foods to children.
- - Placing graphic warning labels on pop and other high-calorie foods with little to no nutritional
- value.
- - Adding retail displays for high-sugar, high-fat foods that prominently advise consumers of the
- health risks.
- - Restricting the availability of sugary, low-nutritional value foods in sports and other recreational
- - facilities frequented by young people.
- Just as graphic images are required on cigarette packages, the doctors said, junk food such as
- french fries should come in packaging illustrating the toll obesity takes on the body. Potential
- images include a foot with an open wound meant to reflect on a problem that people with diabetes
- may suffer, or a liver riddled with fatty liver disease.
- The OMA is starting its own advertising campaign against low nutritional foods, saying such a move
- helped bring smoking rates down and could help lead to better eating habits.
- The group has not yet spoken with governments or the food industry.
- Food and beverage groups called taxing groceries a simplistic approach to a complex issue.
- The government of Denmark introduced a tax on saturated fat last year and has abandoned it, Food
- and Consumer Products of Canada said.
- Taxation "does not change behaviour, it hurts middle and lower income families and it costs food
- and beverage manufacturing jobs," said Jim Goetz, president of the Canadian Beverage Association.
- "This is a bit of a shame and blame campaign."
- Almost one in three Canadian children aged five to 17 — 31.5 per cent — is overweight or obese,
- compared to 14 to 18 per cent in the early 1980s, Statistics Canada reported last month.
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