Fat, sick and sad South Africans

Two-thirds of women in South Africa are overweight or obese; the country's preschool children are among the fattest in the world and a quarter of adults eat too much sugar and fat. However, most South Africans thnik they are pretty healthy.
Fat, sick and sad South Africans

Results of the first SA National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, released on Tuesday (6 August), paint a picture of a country at serious risk of diabetes, strokes, heart attacks and some cancers.

The Human Sciences Research Council and the Medical Research Council conducted an extensive research study for the first time to record the epidemic of non-infectious or non-communicable [lifestyle] diseases and evaluate the state of health in South Africa.

More than 250,00 people were surveyed last year and blood taken from 8,078 of them and tested for "biomarkers" of diseases.

Previous surveys have looked at specific aspects of health but this one gives a comprehensive picture of South Africa's health.

The findings include:

  • The waists of six out of 10 women older than 50 are 88cm or more (an extra-large size), which puts them at "significant" risk of lifestyle disease, but a third of children report having no food to take to school;
  • 22% of children aged between two and five are overweight or obese. The figure is 12% in the US;
  • In the homes of 33.9% of those aged 10 to 14 there is no food for breakfast;
  • 18.3% of children have no one to help them make a packed lunch for school;
  • One in two women and one in three men under the age of 40 failed a fitness test in which they had to run up and down a step;

  • One in four households goes to bed hungry.

The findings were not all doom and gloom. Participants were asked about their perception of the health system and 96.8% said they received care when they needed it. Only 9% reported shortages of medicine.

South Africans know they are overweight. Most perceive themselves as fat, with less than a quarter thinking they are a normal weight. However, most people said they were in good health, with only 5.1% reporting bad health.

Not actually healthy

The HSRC says the population is not as healthy as it might believe because many might not have been diagnosed with disease or post-traumatic stress disorder. One in 10 people suffer from the mental condition caused by trauma or exposure to violence.

The chief executive of the HSRC, Professor Olive Shisana, called mental illness the Cinderella disease in the country. She called for better screening of people when they went to a hospital or clinic.

The council said the serious shortage of mental health professionals also needed to be tackled.

Speaking at the release of the report in Pretoria, HSRC professor Demetre Labadarious praised the food fortification programme, which includes the addition of iron and vitamins to maize. He said anaemia rates had decreased in recent years.

Food security had increased from 25% of all households to 45.6% of them. "The increase from 1998 was significant. It tells us a powerful story," Labadarious said.

Smoking, too, has declined, from 32% of adults in 1993 to 16.4% in 2012.

The HSRC praised stricter government regulations for this decline and called for a ban on smoking in public places, which has been introduced in draft regulation but not yet signed into law. Almost half of all smokers told researchers that warning labels on cigarette packs made them think about quitting.

The survey found that 17% of households perceived alcohol abuse as a problem and the HSRC said it was behind the health minister's call for a ban on alcohol advertising.

Source: The Times via I-Net Bridge


 
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