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New report lifts the lid on the UK’s broken food
system, reveals the ten key signs that it’s damaging our
nation’s health and proposes remedies for tackling the
problem
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Shocking new statistics reveal a national scandal –
Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Jamie Oliver, , and MP are among voices calling
for urgent political attention
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Diabetes-related amputations have risen by 25% in the
last eight years
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Nearly half (45.6%) of the people employed in the food
industry are low-paid
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Only 14% of ready meals are meat-free
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Children in deprived communities are more than 1cm
shorter on average than their wealthier counterparts by the
time they reach age 11
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Half of breakfast cereals marketed to children are high
in sugar, and one portion contains more than a third of a
child’s daily allowance
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Children and poorest families are the first to suffer
the health consequences of a rigged system
A new
report, The Broken Plate,
identifies ten signs that show the UK ’s food system has led the
country into a national health crisis, with children and
households on low incomes suffering the severest health
consequences.
Ten fatally-flawed cogs in the system that puts food on UK tables
are working to damage our mental and physical health. New
analysis from independent think tank the Food
Foundation and partner
organisations finds that diabetes-related amputations have risen
by 25% in the last eight years, only 14% of ready meals are
meat-free and nearly half (46.5%) of the people who are employed
in the food industry are low-paid. Furthermore, people working
for food companies top the list of those seeking payday loans in
the UK.
The analysis also shows that children in deprived communities are
more than one centimetre shorter on average than children in
wealthy communities by the time they reach age 11, that half of
breakfast cereals marketed to children are high in sugar, and
that childhood obesity rates in deprived areas are more than
double compared with their wealthier counterparts.
The damage inflicted on public health by the UK food system, and
the barriers to accessing affordable, healthy food, are evident:
20% of 11-year-olds are obese, 3.1 million people are registered
with diabetes, 16% of adults report skipping meals because they
don’t have enough money and nearly four million children are
living in households for whom a healthy diet is unaffordable. In
the fifth biggest economy in the world, the poorest 10% of UK
households would have to spend three quarters of their disposable
income on food in order to afford a healthy diet as defined by
the Government.
The Broken Plate makes recommendations for how to
reshape the food system so that healthy diets are affordable,
appealing and convenient for all. Preventing marketing unhealthy
food to children, supporting public health in the Agriculture
Bill, encouraging industry to create healthier products and
harnessing the power of public procurement to deliver healthier
meals in hospitals, schools and prisons would all help to put the
right food on UK tables in order to support rather than harm
public health. The report also calls for the Government and
businesses to develop a bold vision for tackling the problem, and
identifies cross-departmental accountability as crucial to
reducing diet-related illness and health inequalities.
Case studies featured in the report provide examples of
successful efforts to influence food systems, highlighting
policies that can make a meaningful difference when properly
implemented. The Amsterdam Healthy Weight Programme was launched
in 2013 in response to substantially higher rates of childhood
overweight and obesity compared to the Netherlands national
average. The prevalence of overweight children in Amsterdam
dropped from 21% in 2012 to 18.5% in 2015, with the biggest
decrease among children with a low socioeconomic status. In 2014,
the Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive (FINI) grant programme
was launched in the US, and aimed to make it easier for low
income households to buy more fruit and vegetables by providing
food-purchasing. Between 74% and 94% of participants reported an
increase in their purchase or consumption of fruits and
vegetables, as well as improved health outcomes such as weight
loss and chronic disease management.
Anna Taylor, Executive Director of the Food
Foundation, said: “The evidence in The Broken
Plate shows clearly that we are not all free to choose
a healthy diet if we want to. Unhealthy options are more
accessible, more abundant and three times more affordable: we
have a system that is rigged against our ability to buy food
that’s good for us. The consequences for our health are
devastating, and are felt most keenly by children and deprived
households. There’s no silver bullet for fixing our broken food
system, but the change we so urgently need will be possible if
industry and government take action now.”