CHILDREN in Fukushima are getting fatter as outdoor
activities have been cut in the area due to radiation fears after last year's
nuclear disaster, a Japanese government report said.
The education ministry said it had surveyed the heights
and weights of about 700,000 children, aged between five and 17, at schools and
kindergartens across the country this year. It compared the number of obese
children, defined as weighing at least 20 per cent more than the average for
their age and height, among the 47 prefectures.
Fukushima registered the highest rates in seven of the 13
age groups, the ministry said. In 2010, the prefecture on the north of the main
island Honshu topped the table only in the 10th year of school. "The
amount of exercise has declined in Fukushima, mainly among elementary school
pupils, as outdoor activities in some locations have been restricted after the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant accident," a ministry official told a news
conference.
In Fukushima, 449 - or 56 per cent of public schools -
curbed outdoor activities during school time as of June last year due to radiation
concerns, Kyodo news agency said. Such restrictions remained in place at 71
elementary and junior high schools as of September this year, Kyodo said. In
the accident of March last year, an earthquake-triggered tsunami smashed into
the Fukushima nuclear plant, sparking meltdowns and explosions.
Source: news.com.au
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