Friday, June 4, 2010

Addressing British Columbia’s Obesity Problem

Yesterday, I attended an Obesity Reduction Strategy Stakeholder Forum hosted by the Provincial Health Services Authority in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The aim was to provide feedback on the proposed recommendations for changing the obesogenic environment as well as addressing issues around food, physical activity, treatment and disease surveillance.

Although, by many measures, British Columbia may be Canada’s healthiest province, the annual direct and indirect costs of obesity on British Columbians is conservatively estimated at $ 1 billion. In fact, over 100,000 people in British Columbia may already have obesity that is severe enough to warrant surgery.

As a clinician, I was allocated to the treatment discussion group. This group championed the proposal to develop a continuum of obesity management services that address the needs of uncomplicated overweight to morbidly obese people, ranging from clinical prevention to bariatric surgery.

Of course, other groups focused on population wide prevention strategies including recommendations to change the food landscapes in schools and workplaces as well as a range of suggestions on how to make everyone more physically active.

There was also considerable time allotted to pointing out that there would need to be very specific considerations for dealing with obesity amongst British Columbia’s substantial and diverse First Nation, Metis, and Inuit population.

While it is certainly a long way from this discussion to actually implementing policy and providing services, it is certainly a promising step towards recognizing and addressing this issue.

Although there were some interesting discussions in the room about the complexity of the whole problem and what exactly to do next, there was clear consensus on one point: doing nothing is not an option!

AMS
Edmonton, Alberta

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2 Responses to “Addressing British Columbia’s Obesity Problem”

  1. Walter says:

    Obesity is a huge problem in all provinces of Canada and still the food industry will not change to produce foods that are not loaded with salt, sugar or phony fats.

    It also seems that Federal and Provincial Health authorities are unable to demand that the food industry to change.

    Obesity will continue to being a huge problem until the Federal and Provincial Health authorities demand change.

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  2. William Graber says:

    good luck, what are the next steps? Any more meeting planned?

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