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Oct 31st, 2012
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  1. Ontario Doctors Urge Unhealthy Treats Warning Labels and Taxes
  2.  
  3. Unhealthy foods should be taxed the same way tobacco is as part of an effort to battle childhood
  4. obesity, Ontario doctors say.
  5.  
  6. The recommendation is part of an Ontario Medical Association (OMA) campaign launched Tuesday.
  7.  
  8. The OMA says three-quarters of overweight children will remain so in adulthood, with health effects
  9. ranging from diabetes to certain types of cancer and heart disease.
  10.  
  11. "If we don't start taking immediate action now, our health-care system will soon be overwhelmed by
  12. the demands of a completely preventable complication associated with obesity," said OMA President
  13. Dr. Doug Weir.
  14.  
  15. The group suggests that the province introduce policies including:
  16.  
  17. - Increasing taxes on unhealthy treats and decreasing taxes on healthy foods.
  18. - Restricting marketing of fatty and sugary foods to children.
  19. - Placing graphic warning labels on pop and other high-calorie foods with little to no nutritional
  20. value.
  21. - Adding retail displays for high-sugar, high-fat foods that prominently advise consumers of the
  22. health risks.
  23. - Restricting the availability of sugary, low-nutritional value foods in sports and other recreational
  24. - facilities frequented by young people.
  25.  
  26. Just as graphic images are required on cigarette packages, the doctors said, unhealthy treats such as
  27. french fries should come in packaging illustrating the toll obesity takes on the body. Potential
  28. images include a foot with an open wound meant to reflect on a problem that people with diabetes
  29. may suffer, or a liver riddled with fatty liver disease.
  30.  
  31. The OMA is starting its own advertising campaign against low nutritional foods, saying such a move
  32. helped bring smoking rates down and could help lead to better eating habits.
  33.  
  34. The group has not yet spoken with governments or the food industry.
  35.  
  36. Food and beverage groups called taxing groceries a simplistic approach to a complex issue.
  37.  
  38. The government of Denmark introduced a tax on saturated fat last year and has abandoned it, Food
  39. and Consumer Products of Canada said.
  40.  
  41. Taxation "does not change behaviour, it hurts middle and lower income families and it costs food
  42. and beverage manufacturing jobs," said Jim Goetz, president of the Canadian Beverage Association.
  43. "This is a bit of a shame and blame campaign."
  44.  
  45. Almost one in three Canadian children aged five to 17 — 31.5 per cent — is overweight or obese,
  46. compared to 14 to 18 per cent in the early 1980s, Statistics Canada reported last month.
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