Obesity is a health complication that takes a while before affecting the wellbeing of an individual. According to Eastwood (2013), obesity is like a process, it is a health complication that develops in due time due to poor eating habits as well as lack of proper exercise. Obesity continues to be a health inequality as most people and especially children are faced with this health complication. According to a study conducted by Cronberg et al., (2010) obesity as a health issue needs to be treated with all the seriousness as a growing trend among children and young adults. Research revealed that by the year 2020 at least half of the children from both genders will be affected due to being obese. Cronberg et al., (2010) state that 20% of the boys and 30% of the girls from the next generation in 2020 will be obese. Obese is a condition that puts the lives of those suffering from this condition at risk of suffering from life-threatening diseases which may eventually lead to death. Children suffering from obesity tend to depress as they suffer from physical, psychological, and social discrimination from school and their peers.
Obesity occurrence among young children has contributed to the development of the condition up to adulthood. With such consequences at hand, it is therefore important for the relevant authorities who include the government and health practitioners to create awareness and fight the disease at an early age (PHE, 2013). Child obesity is associated with recent urban health issues. This is because such urban health issues tend to occur due to the significant difference that takes place in the socioeconomic, biological, and environmental factors surrounding an individual (Gibbons et al, 2011).
According to Gibbons et al. (2011), all the above-mentioned factors are relative to a person’s background in terms of ethnicity, race, and occupation and will therefore the extent to which obesity affects people vary. According to Libman et al (2010) child obesity has developed into an urban health issue in London and the borough of Hackney. Libman et al. (2010) argue that there is a high prevalence of child obesity in London city which puts the health and wellbeing of its inhabitants at risk. As a result child obesity In London and the borough of Hackney, will affect the future of its residents since the growth of these epidemics concerns the diverse population in London. As health inequality, child obesity has placed the borough of Hackney in a vulnerable position which is likely to paralyze the economic and social growth of Hackney.
Child obesity has continued to be a concern for the population of Hackney. According to the Office of National Statistics (2007), 24% of the children in Hackney of the age of six years are obese while 14% of those between 7 and 8 years are at risk of being obese in 2010. Additionally, the number of children participating in any physical activities at school has decreased and only two or more students are likely in a sport for more than an hour at school. Nonetheless, in the years 2011 through to 2012, the government had affirmed that at least 40% of the children under the age of ten in Hackney were obese. Hackney is characterized as one of the most deprived boroughs in London with the highest number of obese children.
Child obesity as a health issue affecting the people of Hackney has been associated with some kind of racial or ethnic profiling. For instance, the highest populations of children who are obese tend to come from minor cultural backgrounds such as the black Africans and other minority ethnicities who make 85% of the population. According to the research conducted on the borough, child obesity is greatly associated with this factor regardless of a clear link connecting the two elements (NOO, 2011).
According to the Hackney Health Profile (2010), there is a relationship linking child obesity with specific cultural backgrounds. For instance, in 2011 out of the 85% of the minor racial population in Hackney, 25% of the children from this percentage were either obese or at risk of being overweight.
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