Doctors say Easter eggs sold in January fuel the obesity epidemic



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Doctors and the public are calling for the end of the long-term holiday, which means supermarkets will start selling Easter eggs in January, fueling the UK's obesity epidemic.

According to a survey by the Royal Society of Public Health (RSPH), 77% of respondents believe that supermarkets sell chocolate treats too early.

This particularly affects parents, nearly three in five stating that promotional Easter egg stalls, located in a prime location near crates, have prompted their children to ask for treats.


We will tell you what is true. You can form your own view.

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But children are far from the only ones whose will is easily influenced; As the survey of 2,000 people showed, 23% have already bought and removed a chocolate egg – at three weeks of Easter.

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1/44 Advertisements for junk food could be banned before turning

Advertisements for junk food on TV and online could be banned before 9 pm as part of the government's plans to tackle the "epidemic" of childhood obesity.
Plans for the new watershed have been submitted for public consultation to combat the growing crisis, said the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs (DHSC).

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Leaving Africa about 70,000 years ago, humans came up against Neanderthals from Eurasia. While humans were weak in the face of new land diseases, breeding with Neanderthals allowed a better equipped immune system

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3/44 Breath test for cancer in Britain

The respiratory biopsy device is designed to detect the hallmarks of cancer in expired molecules by patients.

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4/44 An average 10-year-old child consumed the amount of sugar recommended for an adult

At the age of 10, children have already consumed on average more sugar than the recommended amount for an 18-year-old child. The average age of 10 consumes the equivalent of 13 pieces of sugar a day, or 8 more than is recommended.

Pennsylvania

5/44 The experts in child health advise to turn off the screens one hour before bedtime

Although there is not enough evidence of harm to recommend UK-wide screen-use limits, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health advised children to avoid the screens 1 hour before bedtime so as not to disturb their sleep.

Getty

6/44 According to a study, daily aspirin is not necessary for healthy elderly people

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Getty

7/44 According to US study, venging could lead to cancer

A study at the Masonic Cancer Center of the University of Minnesota found that carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde, acrolein and methylglyoxal are present in the saliva of electronic cigarette consumers.

Reuters

8/44 More children are obese and diabetic

There has been a 41% increase in the number of children with type 2 diabetes since 2014, the National Diabetes Audit found in children. Obesity is a major cause

Reuters

9/44 Most children's antidepressants are ineffective and can lead to suicidal thoughts.

The majority of antidepressants are ineffective and may pose a risk to the safety of children and adolescents with major depression, experts warned. To date, as part of the most comprehensive comparison of 14 commonly prescribed antidepressants, researchers have found that a single brand is more effective at relieving the symptoms of depression than a placebo. Another popular drug, venlafaxine, has been shown to increase risk users engaging in suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts.

Getty

10/44 According to a study, gay, bad and bibadual adults are at greater risk of suffering from heart disease

Researchers at the South Florida Clinic Baptist Health in Miami focused on seven areas of controllable cardiovascular health and found that these minority groups were particularly likely to smoke and have poorly controlled blood sugar.

iStock

11/44 Breakfast cereals for children contain "consistently high" sugar levels since 1992 despite claims by the producer

A major pressure group recently issued a warning about extremely high levels of sugar in breakfast cereals, especially for children, and said that levels had barely been reduced in the last two decades and half.

Getty

12/44 Potholes make us fat, warns NHS watchdog

New directive from the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the body that determines the treatment that the NHS should fund, said that lax road repair works and Car-dominated streets contributed to the obesity epidemic by preventing members of the public from remaining active

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13/44 New menopause medications offer women relief from "debilitating" hot flashes

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14/44 Doctors Should Prescribe More Antidepressants For People With Mental Health Problems, Study Says

Research by the University of Oxford has revealed that more than one million additional people with mental health problems would benefit from being prescribed drugs, and criticized the "ideological" reasons invoked by doctors not to do so.

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15/44 A student dies of the flu after the NHS advised him to stay home and avoid emergencies

The family of a teenager who died of the flu urged people not to delay the move to the emergency department if they were worried about their symptoms. Melissa Whiteley, an 18-year-old engineering student from Hanford in Stoke-on-Trent, got sick at Christmas and died at the hospital a month later.

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20/44 NHS examining thousands of cervical cancer smears after women had wronged all

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22/44 NHS Nurse vacancies at a record high with over 34,000 advertised positions

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24/44 More than 75,000 people sign a petition calling on Richard Branson's Virgin Care to return the sums paid to the NHS

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25/44 More than 700 fewer nurses trained in England the first year after the NHS fellowship was abolished

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28/44 You can not be fit and fat

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29/44 Sleep deprivation

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31/44 Lawyers warn of "fundamental right to health" after Brexit

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34/44 Cycling to work "could halve the risk of cancer and heart disease"

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35/44 Playing Tetris at the hospital after a traumatic incident could prevent PTSD

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38/44 Contraceptive gel that creates a "reversible vasectomy" that has proven effective in monkeys

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40/44 Japanese government asks people to stop working excessively

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42/44 The discovery of the "universal vaccine against cancer" announced by experts

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43/44 Research has shown that diabetes can be used to stop the first signs of Parkinson's disease.

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44/44 Drinking alcohol could reduce the risk of diabetes

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1/44 Advertisements for junk food could be banned before turning

Advertisements for junk food on TV and online could be banned before 9 pm as part of the government's plans to tackle the "epidemic" of childhood obesity.
Plans for the new watershed have been submitted for public consultation to combat the growing crisis, said the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs (DHSC).

Pennsylvania

2/44 Breeding with Neanderthals helped man to fight diseases

Leaving Africa about 70,000 years ago, humans came up against Neanderthals from Eurasia. While humans were weak in the face of new land diseases, breeding with Neanderthals allowed a better equipped immune system

Pennsylvania

3/44 Breath test for cancer in Britain

The respiratory biopsy device is designed to detect the hallmarks of cancer in expired molecules by patients.

Getty

4/44 An average 10-year-old child consumed the amount of sugar recommended for an adult

At the age of 10, children have already consumed on average more sugar than the recommended amount for an 18-year-old child. The average age of 10 consumes the equivalent of 13 pieces of sugar a day, or 8 more than is recommended.

Pennsylvania


5/44 The experts in child health advise to turn off the screens one hour before bedtime

Although there is not enough evidence of harm to recommend UK-wide screen-use limits, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health advised children to avoid the screens 1 hour before bedtime so as not to disturb their sleep.

Getty

6/44 According to a study, daily aspirin is not necessary for healthy elderly people

A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine revealed that many seniors took aspirin daily without much success

Getty

7/44 According to US study, venging could lead to cancer

A study at the Masonic Cancer Center of the University of Minnesota found that carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde, acrolein and methylglyoxal are present in the saliva of electronic cigarette consumers.

Reuters

8/44 More children are obese and diabetic

There has been a 41% increase in the number of children with type 2 diabetes since 2014, the National Diabetes Audit found in children. Obesity is a major cause

Reuters


9/44 Most children's antidepressants are ineffective and can lead to suicidal thoughts.

The majority of antidepressants are ineffective and may pose a risk to the safety of children and adolescents with major depression, experts warned. To date, as part of the most comprehensive comparison of 14 commonly prescribed antidepressants, researchers have found that a single brand is more effective at relieving the symptoms of depression than a placebo. Another popular drug, venlafaxine, has been shown to increase risk users engaging in suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts.

Getty

10/44 According to a study, gay, bad and bibadual adults are at greater risk of suffering from heart disease

Researchers at the South Florida Clinic Baptist Health in Miami focused on seven areas of controllable cardiovascular health and found that these minority groups were particularly likely to smoke and have poorly controlled blood sugar.

iStock

11/44 Breakfast cereals for children contain "consistently high" sugar levels since 1992 despite claims by the producer

A major pressure group recently issued a warning about extremely high levels of sugar in breakfast cereals, especially for children, and said that levels had barely been reduced in the last two decades and half.

Getty

12/44 Potholes make us fat, warns NHS watchdog

New directive from the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the body that determines the treatment that the NHS should fund, said that lax road repair works and Car-dominated streets contributed to the obesity epidemic by preventing members of the public from remaining active

Pennsylvania


13/44 New menopause medications offer women relief from "debilitating" hot flashes

A new clbad of treatments for postmenopausal women is able to reduce the number of debilitating hot flushes by as much as three-quarters in a few days, a trial revealed.
The drug used in the trial belongs to a group known as NKB antagonists (blockers), which have been developed to treat schizophrenia but which have been 'unused on a shelf', according to the Professor Waljit Dhillo, professor of endocrinology and metabolism.

REX

14/44 Doctors Should Prescribe More Antidepressants For People With Mental Health Problems, Study Says

Research by the University of Oxford has revealed that more than one million additional people with mental health problems would benefit from being prescribed drugs, and criticized the "ideological" reasons invoked by doctors not to do so.

Getty

15/44 A student dies of the flu after the NHS advised him to stay home and avoid emergencies

The family of a teenager who died of the flu urged people not to delay the move to the emergency department if they were worried about their symptoms. Melissa Whiteley, an 18-year-old engineering student from Hanford in Stoke-on-Trent, got sick at Christmas and died at the hospital a month later.

Just give

16/44 The government will examine thousands of implants harmful to the bad

The government is committed to examining tens of thousands of cases in which women have received implants harmful to the bad.

Getty


17/44 Jeremy Hunt announces "zero suicide ambition" for the NHS

The NHS will be invited to go further in preventing the deaths of patients entrusted to it as part of the "zero suicide ambition" launched today.

Getty

18/44 Human trials start with a cancer treatment that causes the immune system to kill tumors

The human trials began with a new anti-cancer therapy capable of causing the immune system to eradicate the tumors. The treatment, which works like a vaccine, is a combination of two existing drugs, of which very small amounts are injected into the solid mbad of a tumor.

Wikimedia Commons / Nephron

19/44 Major study finds baby's health is born near fracking sites

Mothers living less than one kilometer from a fracturing site were 25% more likely to have a low birth weight child, which increased their risk of asthma, ADHD and other problems

Getty

20/44 NHS examining thousands of cervical cancer smears after women had wronged all

Thousands of cervical cancer screening results are under review after laboratory failures have resulted in some women being harmed. A number of women have already been asked to contact their physician as a result of identifying "procedural issues" in the service provided by Pathology First Laboratory.

Rex


21/44 Scientists have discovered a potential key to stopping the spread of bad cancer

Most bad cancer patients do not die from their initial tumor, but from secondary malignancies (metastases), where cancer cells can enter the bloodstream and survive to invade new sites. Asparagine, a molecule named after asparagus, where it was first identified in large quantities, has been shown to be an essential ingredient for tumor cells to acquire these migratory properties.

Getty

22/44 NHS Nurse vacancies at a record high with over 34,000 advertised positions

The NHS is currently announcing a record number of nursing and midwifery positions, with more than 34,000 positions currently vacant, according to the latest data. La demande d'infirmières était de 19% supérieure entre juillet et septembre 2017 par rapport à la même période il y a deux ans.

REX

23/44 L’extrait de cannabis pourrait fournir une «nouvelle clbade de traitement» pour la psychose

Le CBD a un effet largement opposé au delta-9-tétrahydrocannabinol (THC), principal composant actif du cannabis et substance responsable de la paranoïa et de l’anxiété.

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24/44 Plus de 75 000 personnes signent une pétition appelant Virgin Care de Richard Branson à restituer les sommes versées au NHS

La société de M. Branson a poursuivi le NHS en justice l’année dernière après avoir perdu un contrat de fourniture de services de santé pour enfants à travers le Surrey d’un montant de 82 millions de livres sterling, invoquant des inquiétudes concernant de «graves défauts» dans l’attribution du contrat.

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25/44 Plus de 700 infirmières de moins se sont entraînées en Angleterre la première année après la suppression de la bourse du NHS

Le nombre de personnes acceptant d'étudier les sciences infirmières en Angleterre a diminué de 3% en 2017, tandis que le nombre de personnes acceptées au Pays de Galles et en Écosse, où les bourses étaient conservées, a augmenté de 8,4% et 8% respectivement.

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26/44 Une étude historique badocie 120 000 morts à l'austérité conservatrice

Le document a révélé qu'il y avait 45 000 décès de plus au cours des quatre premières années d'économies réalisées par les conservateurs que ce à quoi on aurait pu s'attendre si le financement avait été maintenu aux niveaux préélectoraux.

Sur cette trajectoire qui pourrait atteindre près de 200 000 décès excédentaires d’ici à la fin de 2020, même avec le financement supplémentaire prévu pour les services du secteur public cette année.

Reuters

27/44 Les longs trajets comportent des risques pour la santé

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Shutterstock

28/44 Vous ne pouvez pas être en forme et gros

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29/44 Privation de sommeil

Lorsque vous vous sentez particulièrement épuisé, vous pouvez certainement avoir l'impression que votre cerveau manque également de capacités. Maintenant, une nouvelle étude a suggéré que cela pourrait être parce que la privation chronique de sommeil peut effectivement amener le cerveau à se manger

Shutterstock

30/44 Cours d'exercices proposant un lancement de siestes de 45 minutes

David Lloyd Gyms a lancé un nouveau cours sur la santé et le conditionnement physique, qui consiste essentiellement en un groupe de personnes faisant la sieste pendant 45 minutes. Le groupe de conditionnement physique a été incité à lancer le cours «napercise» après que la recherche ait révélé que 86% des parents se disaient fatigués. La clbade s’adresse donc principalement aux parents mais il n’est pas nécessaire d’avoir des enfants pour participer.

Getty

31/44 Les avocats mettent en garde sur le "droit fondamental à la santé" après le Brexit

Les sociétés productrices de tabac et d’alcool pourraient gagner plus facilement devant les tribunaux, comme la récente bataille pour les emballages de cigarettes neutres, si la Charte des droits fondamentaux de l’UE était abandonnée, a déclaré un avocat et un professeur de santé publique.

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32/44 «Des milliers de personnes meurent» de peur des effets secondaires inexistants des statines

Une nouvelle étude majeure sur les effets secondaires du médicament hypocholestérolémiant suggère que les symptômes communs tels que la douleur et la faiblesse musculaires ne sont pas causés par les médicaments eux-mêmes.

Getty


33/44 Les bébés nés de pères âgés de moins de 25 ans ont un risque plus élevé d'autisme

Une nouvelle recherche a montré que les bébés nés de pères âgés de moins de 25 ans ou de plus de 51 ans courent un risque plus élevé de développer l’autisme et d’autres troubles sociaux. L’étude, menée par le Centre Seaver pour le traitement et le traitement de l’autisme au mont Sinaï, a révélé que ces enfants sont en réalité plus avancés que leurs pairs en tant que nourrissons, mais qu’ils prennent du retard au moment où ils atteignent leur adolescence.

Getty

34/44 Se rendre au travail à vélo «pourrait réduire de moitié le risque de cancer et de maladie cardiaque»

De nouvelles recherches suggèrent que les navetteurs qui échangent leur laissez-pbader d'autobus ou d'autobus contre un vélo pourraient réduire de moitié leur risque de développer une maladie cardiaque et un cancer, mais les militants ont averti qu'il était toujours «urgent» d'améliorer les conditions de route des cyclistes.

Se rendre au travail à vélo est badocié à un risque moins élevé de développer un cancer de 45% et de 46% les maladies cardiovasculaires, selon une étude réalisée sur un quart de million de personnes.

Les chercheurs de l'Université de Glasgow ont découvert que marcher pour se rendre au travail avait également des effets bénéfiques sur la santé, mais pas au même degré que le cyclisme.

Getty

35/44 Jouer à Tetris à l'hôpital après un incident traumatique pourrait prévenir l'ESPT

Des scientifiques ont mené des recherches sur 71 victimes d’accidents de la route alors qu’ils attendaient un traitement dans un hôpital spécialisé dans les accidents et les urgences. Ils ont demandé à la moitié des patients de rappeler brièvement l'incident, puis de jouer au jeu informatique clbadique. Les autres ont ensuite reçu une activité écrite à compléter. Les chercheurs de l’Institut Karolinska en Suède et de l’Université d’Oxford ont découvert que les patients qui avaient joué à Tetris avaient signalé moins de souvenirs intrusifs, communément appelés flashbacks, au cours de la semaine qui a suivi.

Rex

36/44 Après la dernière étude, l'utilisation de la nicotine comme alternative à la cigarette est plus saine

Après la première étude à long terme de ses effets sur les ex-fumeurs, les experts en matière de santé ont vivement critiqué le vape.
Après six mois, les scientifiques qui ont pbadé du tabac continuellement aux cigarettes électroniques contenaient beaucoup moins de toxines et de substances cancérogènes que les fumeurs

Getty


37/44 Une méthode courante de cuisson du riz peut laisser des traces d'arsenic dans les aliments, avertissent les scientifiques

Des scientifiques ont prévenu que des millions de personnes courent le risque de cuire leur riz de manière incorrecte.
Des expériences récentes montrent une méthode courante de cuisson du riz – le faire simplement bouillir dans une cbaderole jusqu'à ce que l'eau soit cuite – peut exposer ceux qui le consomment aux traces de l'arsenic, un poison qui contamine le riz pendant sa croissance en raison de toxines pesticides

Getty

38/44 Gel contraceptif qui crée une «vasectomie réversible» qui s'est avéré efficace chez les singes

Un gel contraceptif injectable qui agit comme une «vasectomie réversible» est sur le point d’être offert aux hommes après des essais réussis sur des singes.
Vasalgel est injecté dans le cbad déférent, le petit cbad situé entre les testicules et l'urètre. Jusqu’à présent, il a été prouvé qu’il empêchait 100% des conceptions

Vasalgel

39/44 Un travail posté et des charges lourdes peuvent réduire la fertilité des femmes, selon une étude

Une nouvelle étude a révélé que les femmes qui travaillent de nuit ou effectuent des quarts de travail irréguliers peuvent connaître une baisse de la fécondité.
Selon des chercheurs de l'Université Harvard, les travailleurs postés et de nuit ont moins d'œufs capables de se transformer en embryons sains que ceux qui travaillent de jour en jour

Getty

40/44 Le gouvernement japonais demande aux gens de cesser de travailler excessivement

Le gouvernement japonais a annoncé des mesures visant à limiter le nombre d'heures supplémentaires que les employés peuvent faire, afin d'empêcher les personnes de travailler littéralement à mort.

A fifth of Japan’s workforce are at risk of death by overwork, known as karoshi, as they work more than 80 hours of overtime each month, according to a government survey.

Getty


41/44 High blood pressure may protect over 80s from dementia

It is well known that high blood pressure is a risk factor for dementia, so the results of a new study from the University of California, Irvine, are quite surprising. The researchers found that people who developed high blood pressure between the ages of 80-89 are less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease (the most common form of dementia) over the next three years than people of the same age with normal blood pressure.

Getty

42/44 'Universal cancer vaccine’ breakthrough claimed by experts

Scientists have taken a “very positive step” towards creating a universal vaccine against cancer that makes the body’s immune system attack tumours as if they were a virus, experts have said. Writing in Nature, an international team of researchers described how they had taken pieces of cancer’s genetic RNA code, put them into tiny nanoparticles of fat and then injected the mixture into the bloodstreams of three patients in the advanced stages of the disease. The patients' immune systems responded by producing "killer" T-cells designed to attack cancer. The vaccine was also found to be effective in fighting “aggressively growing” tumours in mice, according to researchers, who were led by Professor Ugur Sahin from Johannes Gutenberg University in Germany

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43/44 Research shows that diabetes drug can be used to stop first signs of Parkinson’s

Scientists in a new study show that the first signs of Parkinson’s can be stopped. The UCL study is still in its research period but the team are ‘excited’. Today’s Parkinson’s drugs manage the symptoms of the disease but ultimately do not stop its progression in the brain.

Pennsylvania

44/44 Drinking alcohol could reduce risk of diabetes

A new study shows that drinking alcohol three to four days a week could reduce the risk of diabetes. Wine was found to be most effective in reducing the risk due to the chemical compounds that balance blood sugar levels.

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Shirley Cramer, chief executive of the RSPH, said retailers claim that they’re committed to ending the obesity crisis, but this needs to be backed up by a change in their damaging marketing schemes.

She said: “It is clear that many shops and supermarkets are pushing products way too early – it isn’t uncommon to find Easter eggs on sale in the first week of January.

“Our research suggests that the public find this mildly irritating and it is just putting unnecessary temptation out there, particularly for children.”

The UK already has the highest rates of adult obesity in western Europe, with 27 per cent of adults clinically obese.

But it is a growing problem among young children as well. Government figures show one in five pupils in year six was obese and 4.2 per cent were clbaded as “severely obese” – the highest ever rate.

With the average Easter egg accounting for three quarters of an adult’s daily calorie intake, campaigners have called on the government to ban them – and other unhealthy treats – from checkouts and end-of-aisle displays, where they’re most likely to drive impulse buys.

The RSPH poll found widespread agreement (68 per cent) that most holidays and special occasions have become too much of a marketing ploy for unhealthy food.

Last year Coca-Cola had to scale back its Christmas truck tour because of a backlash from councils and health campaigners.

The British Retail Consortium has been approached for comment.


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