Perhaps the most surprising thing about this weekβs findings from the UAEβs first National Nutrition Survey is just how little of surprise there is in it. The examination of 20,000 households found that 22 per cent of people in the country were obese and one in four had high blood pressure, often because of a sedentary lifestyle and a diet high and fat in salt.
The face-to-face interviews using World Health Organisation-approved questionnaires add up to a comprehensive body of research, with both Emirati and expatriate households included. This universality makes findings such as 96 per cent of those in the UAE eating too much salt particularly troubling.
And yet, this information only confirms much of what we already know about nutrition and fitness. From the time of Hippocrates, physicians have recommended that those who are overweight should moderate the amount they eat and move their bodies more. Such observational wisdom was supplemented in later eras by evidential findings, such as those by 19th-century Belgian statistician Adolphe Quetelet. His index for assessing optimal height v weight was later adopted for population studies, becoming the body mass index that is still used today.
When confronted by such troubling facts, many people look to health authorities to take action. However, in the context of the UAE, it is difficult to see what more can be done in policy terms. The authorities at federal and emirate level have not found wanting when it comes to legislation and messaging. From numerous taxes on unhealthy foods to a plethora of publicly backed campaigns to promote wellness β such as the Dubai Fitness Challenge or Abu Dhabiβs Festival of Health β good nutrition really should be no mystery.
Nouf Khamis Al Ali, director of the Health Promotion Department at the Ministry of Health and Prevention, says fighting obesity is a long-term project.
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