Fat is rapidly becoming the biggest public health challenge Australia has to face, according to the president of the Public Health Association of Australia, Professor Mike Daube, who is also the deputy chairman of the government’s National Preventative Health Taskforce.
How carefully do you consider what you eat? Do you know the calorie count of the blueberry muffin and Gloria Jeans grande mocha latte you had for breakfast? What about the pizza you had for dinner last night? In NSW a new labelling law came into place on 1 February whereby fast food chains (with over 20 outlets) have to declare energy (kilojoule) content of all food sold.
It is a little like going out for dinner with the food police. Hard to tuck into your double cheeseburger claiming you didn’t know it was 440 calories worth of bread, meat and cheese when it is glaring at you from a neon billboard. Oh and would you like to know the fat content with that?
Obesity has overtaken smoking as the leading cause of premature death and illness in Australia and medical experts warn we’re about to be inundated by an avalanche of related health issues caused by the fact that too many Australians are extremely overweight.
So what’s the answer? Is it education? Food labelling? Food labelling laws are indeed set for a major overhaul with a review commissioned by federal, state and territory governments calling for simpler “traffic light” labelling on food packaging, with red, orange or green dots to show how healthy it is. Will that stop you from eating a bucket of chicken?