Obesity in Sweden has been increasingly cited as a major health issue in recent years. Sweden is the 90th fattest country in the world.[1] In 2009, the number of people who are considered overweight or obese had not increased for the first time in 70 years.[2] Claude Marcus, a leading Swedish nutrition expert from the Karolinska Institutet, stated that one solution is to introduce a fat tax.[3] Folksam refused to insure a 5-year-old girl from Orust.[4] The insurance company refused her insurance based on "serious overweight/obesity".[4] A report showed that children whose parents were better educated had a lower chance of becoming overweight.[5]
Lack of exercise along with sugar-sweetened foods and drinks have caused one out of six five-year-olds in Sweden to be overweight or obese.[5] The breakdown is 12.9% of children are considered overweight and 4.3% are considered obese.[5]
Several studies in Sweden shown that obese men tend to have a lower sperm count, fewer rapidly mobile sperm and fewer progressively motile sperm compared to normal-weight men.[6]
School nurses in Uppsala, Uppsala County, will be prescribing exercise to teenage children.[7] The prescribed exercise can be anything from participating in a sport to walking.[7] Spaces will be available for the participants.[7]
Source: Forbes.com[1]
Ranking | Country | Percentage Overweight | |
---|---|---|---|
85 | Panama | 51.4 | |
86 | Tunisia | 51.0 | |
87 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 50.6 | |
88 | Brazil | 50.5 | |
89 | Belize | 49.8 | |
90 | Sweden | 49.7 | |
91 | Norway | 49.1 | |
92 | Russia | 49.1 | |
93 | El Salvador | 48.7 | |
94 | Lesotho | 48.5 | |
95 | Suriname | 47.8 |