Experts: Mexicans Should Return To Traditional Cuisine To Fight Obesity

Experts: Mexicans Should Return To Traditional Cuisine To Fight Obesity | Fox News Latino

The traditional diet in Mexico, which ranks No. 1 in the world in childhood obesity and No. 2 in adult obesity, was based on a balanced mix of foods rich in nutrients, vitamins, protein and minerals, the conservatory president said.

Mexico’s traditional diet was not “fully vegetarian,” but it was based on foods grown in the countryside, Lopez said.

About 70 percent of Mexico’s people are obese or overweight, the United Nations said in a recent report.

Lopez said she supported taxing soft drinks, a measure included by President Enrique Peña Nieto in his tax reform package.

Mexican World Gastronomy Forum vice president Eduardo Wichtendahl, for his part, said traditional cooking should be marketed differently.

“Gastronomy today should be placed (in the market) not so much as a subproduct of tourism but as a product in and of itself,” Wichtendahl said.

The Mexican World Gastronomy Forum will take place in the Pacific resort city of Acapulco Oct. 9-12.

There is great ignorance about Mexican food, with many people confusing it with “Tex-Mex” food, a regional cuisine created in the southwestern United States, or thinking it is limited to just tortillas, chilis and tacos, Wichtendahl said.

The traditional Mexican diet eaten by Indian peoples was based on corn, beans and chilis, and was loaded with vitamin C, Wichtendahl said.

The problem in Mexico is excessive consumption of soft drinks, Wichtendahl said, adding that the country’s soft drink consumption averages 163 liters (43.3 gallons) per capita annually.

Experts: Mexicans Should Return To Traditional Cuisine To Fight Obesity | Fox News Latino

Physicians call for sugar tax to tackle obesity in Ireland

childhood obesity in Ireland

The Royal College of Physicians has called on the Government to introduce a 20% tax on sugar sweetened drinks, including sports drinks, in the Budget to tackle obesity.

One in four Irish children is classified as overweight or obese and doctors say sugary foods and drinks are a big part of the problem.

Professor Donal O’Shea of St Vincent’s Hospital said the RCPI believes the tax would significantly impact childhood obesity and in time adult obesity.

“We simply have to act, obesity is killing 6,000 people a year in Ireland,” Prof O’Shea said.

He said the best way to impact the consumption of “free sugar” is to target sugar-sweetened drinks.

Prof O’Shea said a number of measures are needed together to tackle the problem of obesity in the population.

“Simply taxing sugar sweetened drinks without education wont work,” he said.But doing nothing “is not an option”, he added.

Physicians call for sugar tax to tackle obesity – RTÉ News