On Air Now

This is the Coast

Midnight - 6:00am

  • 01723 336444

Now Playing

Paul Young

Everything Must Change

Download

Almost half a billion teenagers will be overweight by 2030, experts warn

Almost half a billion teenagers around the world will be obese by 2030, experts have warned.

Adolescent health has reached a "tipping point", according to the Lancet Commission on Adolescent Health and Wellbeing.

Experts warned the main drivers of ill health among teens has switched from cigarettes and alcohol to weight gain and mental health problems.

They projected 464 million teenagers around the world will be overweight or obese by 2030 - 143 million more than in 2015.

But they did acknowledge that substance abuse among teenagers had declined.

It comes as separate research claimed weight-loss jabs for obese children could be effective in reducing parent battles around mealtimes. But the UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) is "unable to make a recommendation" about use of the jabs on teenagers because of a lack of evidence of their impacts.

Weight-loss jabs, also known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, work by reducing food cravings but are known to cause nausea, diarrhoea, stomach cramps and vision problems.

They have surged in popularity in recent years, and are available on the NHS for adults with a high body mass index (BMI) or through private providers.

Progress in teen health 'lagging well behind'

Today's Lancet report warned that progress in teenage health has "lagged well behind" the improvements that have been made in the health and development of young children, adding that these benefits could subsequently be "undermined" by increasing ill health as children enter their teenage years.

With a shift to an increasingly online world, the commission also argued against overly restricting access. Australia has recently approved a law to ban children under the age of 16 from using social media, in one of the strictest measures in the world.

The experts also said this generation is the first to grow up under harsher climate conditions making them the "first cohort of humans who will live their entire life experiencing the growing reverberations of climate change".

Read more from Sky News:
Public has right to camp on Dartmoor, court says
'I had my leg amputated at 23'
How to avoid holiday roaming charges

Commission co-chairwoman Professor Sarah Baird, from George Washington University in the US, said: "The health and wellbeing of adolescents worldwide is at a tipping point, with mixed progress observed over the past three decades.

"Whilst tobacco and alcohol use has declined and participation in secondary and tertiary education has increased, overweight and obesity have risen by up to eight-fold in some countries in Africa and Asia over the past three decades, and there is a growing burden of poor adolescent mental health globally.

"Additionally, the challenges faced by the world's adolescents are at risk of being exacerbated by emerging global issues including climate change, world conflicts and a rapid transition to a more digital world.

"Investing in the health and wellbeing of young people is crucial for safeguarding our collective future."

Last year, a report by the Food Foundation said children in the UK were getting shorter, fatter and sicker due to "shocking levels" of poverty and food deprivation.

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2025: Almost half a billion teenagers will be overweight by 2030, experts warn

Did you find this article useful?

This is the Coast is committed to providing a daily local news service for the Yorkshire Coast. We are a small locally owned and operated business which employs professional journalists and reporters. We do not receive any public funding or grants and we are entirely funded by our local commercial operations. We enjoy fabulous support from local businesses who work with us on their advertising and marketing campaigns, but the cost of providing high quality, well researched, fact checked local news coverage is significant.

If you appreciate what This is the Coast does, and would like to help support our journalism, please consider supporting us on a monthly basis today.

A small contribution from all our readers would really help support independent journalism for the Yorkshire Coast.

More from World News

Follow Us

Get Our Apps

Our Apps are now available for iOS, Android and Smart Speakers.

  • Available on the App Store
  • Available on Google Play
  • Just ask Amazon Alexa
  • Available on Roku

Today's Weather

  • Scarborough

    Sunny

    High: 11°C | Low: 6°C

  • Filey

    Sunny

    High: 12°C | Low: 6°C

  • Whitby

    Sunny

    High: 12°C | Low: 6°C

  • Bridlington

    Sunny

    High: 13°C | Low: 5°C

  • Hornsea

    Sunny intervals

    High: 12°C | Low: 5°C

  • Driffield

    Sunny intervals

    High: 14°C | Low: 5°C

News