Europe
has 'alarming' rates of smoking, drinking and obesity:
WHO
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[September 23, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, (Reuters) - Europe has the world's
highest rates of drinking and smoking, and more than half its people are
too fat, putting them at high risk of heart disease, cancer and other
deadly illnesses, health officials warned on Wednesday.
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In a report on health in its European Region, the World Health
Organization (WHO) said that while many countries had reduced risk
factors for premature death, rates of obesity, tobacco use and
alcohol consumption "remain alarmingly high".
"Europeans drink and smoke more than anyone else. We are world
champions - and it's not a good record," said Claudia Stein, WHO
Europe's head of information, evidence, research and innovation.
She said this could have the most serious impact on young people,
since their lives may be shortened unless something is done to
reduce consumption of tobacco, alcohol and calories.
Just under 60 percent of people in the WHO's European region are
either overweight or obese, and 30 percent use tobacco. Some 11
liters of pure alcohol is drunk per person per year.
The report found that for now, life expectancy is increasing across
Europe and the region is on track for reducing premature mortality
by 1.5 percent a year until 2020.
This means that the number of people whose lives are cut short by
cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes and chronic respiratory
diseases is steadily declining, it said.
Since the last European health report in 2012, substantial
improvements have also been seen in rates of death from external
causes, such as road traffic accidents and suicides, it found.
Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO's European regional director, applauded the
improvements in health and the steady gains in life expectancy but
added a warning.
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"There is a very real risk that these gains will be lost if smoking
and alcohol consumption continue at the current rate," she said.
"This is especially relevant to young people, who may not live as
long as their grandparents."
The report also looked at vaccination rates and found generally good
levels of coverage.
Average measles immunization coverage rose from 93.4 percent in
2010, to 93.7 percent in 2011 and 94.6 percent in 2012 and is
steadily increasing.
However, gaps in immunity "still account for ongoing endemic
transmission and have led to a number of outbreaks of measles and
rubella in recent years", the report said.
In 2015, four deaths from measles have been reported in the region,
and one child has died of diphtheria – the first case in three
decades.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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