11 Articles
11 Articles
Alcohol, smoking, pollution: Many advances in reducing health risk factors have been overshadowed by a sharp increase in obesity, according to the Organisation for Economic Coordination and Development. Cardiovascular diseases, cancers or diabetes continue to grow.
Obesity has "completely overturned the positive impact of air pollution reductions, smoking, alcohol consumption and sedentary behaviour since 2010", a OECD report says.
Non-communicable diseases such as cancer and diabetes "continue to increase," according to an OECD report.
While obesity hinders the productivity of the majority of developed countries, France must concentrate on its consumption at risk, says a new OECD report.
The progress made since 2010 in public health to reduce risk factorsA physiotherapist helps obese patients with exercises in an obesity unit at Angers University Hospital in Angers, in the west of the...
Paris – The progress made in public health since 2010 through the reduction of air pollution and tobacco and alcohol consumption has been undermined by a sharp rise in obesity in many countries. In 57 percent of around 50 countries surveyed, the incidence of non-communicable diseases...
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