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						Tax sugary drinks to 
						fight obesity and diabetes, World Health Organization 
						says 
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		[October 11, 2016] 
		By Stephanie Nebehay 
		GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health 
		Organization said on Tuesday governments should raise taxes on sugary 
		drinks to fight what it says are global obesity and diabetes epidemics. | 
        
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			 If retail prices of sugar-sweetened drinks are increased by 20 
			percent through taxation, there is a proportional drop in 
			consumption, it said in a report titled "Fiscal Policies for Diet 
			and Prevention of Noncommunicable Diseases". 
 Obesity more than doubled worldwide between 1980 and 2014, with 11 
			percent of men and 15 percent of women classified as obese - more 
			than 500 million people, the WHO said.
 
 An estimated 42 million children under age 5 were overweight or 
			obese in 2015, said Dr. Francesco Branca, director of WHO's 
			department for nutrition and health. This was an increase of about 
			11 million over the past 15 years.
 
 Additionally, some 422 million adults across the world have 
			diabetes.
 
			
			 
			The WHO said there was increasingly clear evidence that taxes and 
			subsidies influence purchasing behavior, and that this could be used 
			to curb consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks and hence fight 
			obesity and diabetes.
 "We are now in a place where we can say there is enough evidence and 
			we encourage countries to implement effective tax policy," Temo 
			Waqanivalu, coordinator at WHO's department of Noncommunicable 
			Diseases and Health Promotion, told a briefing.
 
 The United States has the world's highest rates of obesity per 
			population, but China also has similar absolute numbers among both 
			men and women, Branca, the nutrition director, said.
 
 Sweet drinks are also popular in Latin America, where people in 
			Chile and Mexico are the biggest consumers, he said.
 
			
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			WHO guidelines issued in March 2015 said that adults and children 
			from the Americas to Western Europe and the Middle East need to 
			roughly halve the amount of sugar they consume to lower risk of 
			obesity and tooth decay.
 The guidelines mean people should reduce the amount to less than 10 
			percent of their daily energy intake -- or to about 50 grams or 12 
			teaspoons of sugar for adults - but 5 percent is even better, it 
			said.
 
 The WHO's recommendations cover free sugars such as glucose and 
			fructose, and sucrose or table sugar added to processed foods and 
			drinks.
 
 (Editing by Jeremy Gaunt; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)
 
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