Brit teenage girls surviving on junk food
February 10th, 2010 - 12:37 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, Feb 10 (ANI): A new survey has revealed that teenage girls are increasingly living on junk food, thereby putting their long-term health at risk.
In addition, they are also smoking and drinking more than boys.
The findings from National Diet and Nutrition Survey revealed that the average teenage girl eats 54 grams of chips or fried potatoes every day while the average woman aged 19 to 65 eats just 40g.
Each day the teenager also eats 14g of crisps or other salty snacks, 22g of sweets and chocolate, and 37g of cakes and biscuits.
The consumption pattern also shows that many girls are being influenced by fashion models.
Although they aim to be slim, the study found that 37 per cent of teenage girls are overweight and 22 per cent are classified as obese.
However, among boys of the same age, 35 per cent are overweight but only 16 per cent are obese.
The findings also revealed that 11 per cent of girls aged 13 to 15 drank alcohol every week, compared with 1 per cent of boys the same age.
Moreover, 29 per cent of the young teenage girls said that they smoked cigarettes, compared with 16 per cent of boys.
“Broadly, teenage girls don’t eat enough. Overall, they are a stand-alone group of the population whose diets are poor,” The Times quoted Dr Alison Tedstone, head of nutrition research at the agency, as saying.
The research team also found that teenage girls and boys were eating too much sugar and saturated fat. (ANI)
- A quarter of Brit kids are overweight or obese by the age of 5 - Dec 16, 2010
- Pampering makes young girls fatter than boys - Dec 07, 2010
- Weight gain 'accelerates years after leaving school' - Sep 14, 2010
- Nearly 25 percent UK kids are obese by age 4 - Dec 26, 2010
- Boys get greater rush, more energy from caffeine than girls - Feb 19, 2011
- Sweetener keeps obesity at bay among kids - Jun 29, 2011
- Excess sugar may cause heart attacks later - Jan 11, 2011
- Biscuit and ice cream diet fuelling obesity in babies as young as 4 weeks - Sep 08, 2010
- Blame habits for childhood obesity, not heredity - Feb 01, 2011
- Better body image helps weight loss - Jul 18, 2011
- Spanish study challenges image of healthy Mediterranean diet and lifestyle - Jan 11, 2011
- 50 pct of young girls feel guilty about what they eat - Aug 10, 2010
- One in 10 teenage girls 'lives on one meal a day' - Oct 13, 2009
- High-protein diet reduces hunger in obese - Jul 11, 2011
- 11-year-old girls now have larger waistlines, than in '70s - Apr 14, 2011
Tags: biscuits, cakes, cigarettes, consumption pattern, diet and nutrition, diets, dr alison, fashion models, fried potatoes, girls and boys, junk food, london feb, long term health, national diet, new survey, nutrition research, nutrition survey, salty snacks, teenage girl, young teenage girls