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Monday, September 12, 2016

Jamie Oliver accuses Theresa May of letting down the UK's kids with 'stinking herring' childhood obesity plan : mirror





according to mirror

Jamie Oliver accuses Theresa May of letting down the UK's kids with 'stinking herring' childhood obesity plan

Jamie Oliver accuses Theresa May of letting down the UK's kids with 'stinking herring' childhood obesity plan
Jamie Oliver accuses Theresa May of letting down the UK's kids with 'stinking herring' childhood obesity plan
Jamie Oliver accuses Theresa May of letting down the nation's kidsTheresa May's strategy on childhood obesity is a "stinking herring" that lets down the nation's kids, says Jamie Oliver .The campaigning chef hit out after the Prime Minister failed to curb junk food adverts and ban sweets at supermarket checkouts – ­measures he had been fighting for.He said: "Everything about the childhood obesity strategy that's just come out is a complete stinking herring.


in addition wctrib

More evidence of a link between C-sections and childhood obesity

More evidence of a link between C-sections and childhood obesity
More evidence of a link between C-sections and childhood obesity
Children born by cesarean delivery appear to have higher odds of developing obesity than their peers who experienced vaginal births, a U.S. study suggests.Women who had surgical deliveries known as C-sections were also more likely to be overweight, or to develop complications like diabetes and high blood pressure during pregnancy, than women who had vaginal births, the study found.After these maternal factors were taken into account, delivery by C-section was still linked to a 15 percent increase in the risk of obesity by the time babies reached adolescence and early adulthood.


in like manner silive

New Harvard study links C-sections to childhood obesity

New Harvard study links C-sections to childhood obesity
New Harvard study links C-sections to childhood obesity
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- A new study by researchers at Harvard University links cesarean (C-section) births to childhood obesity.The study, by Harvard's Chan School of Public Health, found individuals born through cesarean delivery were 15 percent more likely to become obese as children than individuals born by vaginal birth.Additionally, in families, the study found infants born by C-section delivery were a whopping 64 percent more at risk to be obese than their siblings born by vaginal birth.


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