Opposition parties are calling for healthy eating policies
following the release of a report showing New Zealand has one
of the highest rates of diabetes among developed countries.
An international team of researchers, working with the World
Health Organisation, found that New Zealand was among the top
five nations where blood glucose levels indicated diabetes
was the highest.
Labour leader Phil Goff said today the report was further
evidence of the need for policies that brought healthy food
into the affordability range of all families.
"That's what Labour is doing with its policy on fresh fruit
and vegetables," he said, referring to its pledge to remove
GST from those products.
"The Auckland University Medical School said very clearly the
best way to bring down problems like obsesity and therefore
diabetes is to lower the cost of healthy foods."
Labour's health spokesman, Grant Robertson, said the report
was "a damning indictment of the Government's health
priorities".
"Not only did it drop nutrition and physical activity from
its health targets in 2009, but it also slashed funding for
the Healthy Eating Healthy Action and the healthy eating in
schools programme, and axed funding for the Obesity Action
Coalition," he said.
The Green Party said the report "exposes the folly of the
Government's refusal to promote healthy eating policies".
Health spokeswoman Sue Kedgley said the Government had done
nothing to tackle the diabetes epidemic.
"The Government knows poor nutrition is one of the biggest
killers of New Zealanders but instead of doing something good
about it, they dumped healthy eating programmes," she said.
"Now, we're heading for more unnecessary deaths, escalating
health costs and, eventually, massive health budget
blow-outs."
Progressive Party leader Jim Anderton said a levy on sugary
drinks would help reduce diabetes.
"Without a levy, everyone has to pay more tax to the health
system to help pay for diabetes treatment," he said.
"A little prevention is a better alternative than a lot of
costly treatment after the damage has been done."
Diabetes New Zealand president Chris Baty said when the
report was released yesterday that the Government needed to
make diabetes prevention a priority.
Otago University's professor of nutrition and medicine, Jim
Mann, said there was no specific public health programme in
New Zealand to deal with the obesity problem.
Obesity and diabetes were intrinsically linked and Type 2
diabetes, the most common type, was linked with obesity and a
sedentary lifestyle.
The international study found that Pacific Island nations
were the most at risk, with the highest diabetes levels in
the world.
The increase in diabetes was highest in North America and
comparatively small in Western Europe.
The United States, Greenland, Malta, New Zealand and Spain
had the highest diabetes and blood glucose levels, while the
Netherlands, Austria and France had the lowest.
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