Modern lifestyles: How Britain got so fat

You are supposed to prepare for a discussion on health and a blog entry. Use the below given material to inform yourself on

– eating habits and their effects on people’s health

– the obsession with fitness

After working on the given materials you will be able to exchange well-founded arguments on health topics.

Materials:

Video: Summary of „Supersize me“

Vocabulary

The following website helps with words.

http://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/diet_1?q=diet

Sources

Tasks:

  1. List the reasons for obesity and obsessions with healthy eating.
  2. What are effects of obesity and eating disorders?
  3. What advice is given in the text „This healthy eating obsession is pure poison“?

Text: How Britain got so fat

Read the text carefully before you answer the questions.

A In May 2012, fire engines, police and an ambulance were called to the family home of a teenager called Georgia Davis in Aberdare, South Wales, in order to get her out of it. Nobody could dream up a more horrifying and humiliating nightmare for a girl of her age. A team of more than 40 people was involved in demolishing an upstairs wall of the semi-detached house and constructing a wooden bridge to get a specially reinforced stretcher into her bedroom. Georgia weighed 400kg (63 stone), said some reports. Nobody really knew – she was too heavy to get on the scales. Georgia’s rescuers extracted her through a 10ft square hole in the brickwork and took her to hospital. She was covered by a sheet, because she could no longer get into any of her clothes.

B The 19-year-old was morbidly obese and her organs were failing. Her mother, Lesley, called the ambulance because Georgia could no longer stand. For months she had not moved from her bedroom, where she spent her days on her laptop and watching TV. Eventually, like Alice In Wonderland inside the little house after drinking something she shouldn’t, she grew too big to get out of the door.

C Georgia is the extreme marker of a massive problem that has its roots in the way we live today and affects all of us. Two-thirds of us are overweight. A quarter of us are obese and in real danger of damaging our health and dying prematurely. But we are in denial. Obesity looks like Georgia, we think. It doesn’t look like us.

D Obesity is not something to gawp at, and it is not a problem just for other people. It affects most of us. It’s not about the way we look, or the size of dress or trousers we wear. This is about a very real threat to our health. Obesity is a life-shortening condition. Life expectancy in the UK, which has risen steadily since records began, may for the first time be about to fall. Moderate obesity cuts life expectancy by two to four years, and severe obesity could wipe an entire decade off your life. The costs to health services and to the world’s economies of vast numbers of people becoming sick and unable to work are already huge and increasing. The National Heath Service (NHS) is spending £5bn a year treating the consequences of obesity, and the bill is expected to reach £15bn within a few decades.

E Georgia was 15 when she first hit the front page of the Sun, weighing more than 200kg (32 stone) and branded Britain’s fattest teen. The question everybody eagerly asked was what had she been eating – how big a mountain of food? How many cakes at one sitting? Why she should want to was very much of minor interest. Georgia and her mother, who is also obese, spoke of comfort eating after Georgia’s dad died when she was five. Social services discussed removing her from the family, but she resisted.

F We can avoid being overweight by exercising personal responsibility, politicians say, voicing the script written by the food industry. We choose what we put into our mouths. We ought to know what will make us fat and have the self-restraint to stop eating. But can you really make that judgment of Georgia at the age of seven, who even then weighed 70kg (11 stone) and whom Lesley admits she fed with condensed milk as a baby?

G Georgia sold her story to the tabloids and TV to get the money to go to a weight-loss camp in North Carolina, where she lost half her body weight. She came back to find nothing had changed at home – her mother bought fish and chips because there was nothing to eat in the house. Georgia’s own account, as told to a tabloid newspaper: „Around eight weeks after returning from camp, I drifted off the plan. I felt really alone. My mother wasn’t doing it with me at home and my friends weren’t doing it at college, so there was no motivation to continue. I started reverting to my old ways. I wouldn’t eat for half a day, then start bingeing into the night. “

H There has been no comprehensive plan from any political party to tackle the obesity problem. The unwillingness to talk about fatness allows politicians to avoid the issues or offer half-hearted responses; above all else, it enables them to avoid what they fear would be a damaging confrontation with the powerful economic players within the food and drink industry. Politicians are also afraid they will be accused of taxing the poor if they hike the prices of cheap foods – an argument often put forward by their industry friends. One government after another has opted for talks and voluntary agreements on food labelling and marketing to children. The deals that have been struck have been partial and ineffective.

I To reach the housing estate where Georgia was brought up, you have to climb a steep road. A lot of cars are passing, where once adults and children would have had no option but to walk. Now there is nobody on the pavement. Neither is Georgia in the yellowish-cream semi-detached house, one of many identical homes on the estate. Her mother appears at the door. „She doesn’t live here any more,“ she says. „But she won’t speak to you. She has a contract with the Sun.“

(911 words. Adapted and abridged from The Guardian, June 21st, 2014)

Task 1: Reading comprehension: 

Multiple choice: Mark the most suitable option.

Task 2: Exercises on vocabulary

Find the corresponding words and drag them into the gaps.

Lifestyle: Blog

Task 1:

Write a critical blog entry on diet and exercise. Use at least two collocations of the four sections given in the drop down menu „Collocations“ (NOT „Oxford Collocations Dictionary“!) of the  OALD Online (Link: http://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/diet_1?q=diet) The sections are: weighthealthyeatingexercise and staying healthy. Write at least 200 words.

Material: Diet and Exercise

Services must accommodate obese people with specialist equipment such as much wider chairs.

An extra wide chair beside a number of normal sized chairs.
By No machine-readable author provided. Drriad assumed (based on copyright claims). – No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims)., CC BY-SA 4.0, Link

Fish and chips in a wrapper.

BCLM fish+chips.jpg
By Andy MabbettOwn work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link

Sport in childhood. Association football, shown above, is a team sport which also provides opportunities to nurture physical fitness and social interaction skills.

Youth-soccer-indiana.jpg
By TystoOwn work, Public Domain, Link

Lifestyles: Group discussion

Tax on fatty food and sugary drinks

The world is facing swelling numbers of people who are overweight. In the past decades the number of overweight people has soared. Even in parts of the world like Africa, clinics for overweight people are being established. All in all, more than 2 billion of the world’s population is supposed to be overweight according to the World Health Organisation. Statistics for the USA show that obesity causes 300,000 deaths each year and costs the economy $117 billion per year in additional health-care expenses. Some politicians have floated the idea of a fat tax. They believe that a tax would create a small disincentive towards the consumption of high-fat, low-nutrition foods and sugary drinks and would therefore reduce obesity figures.

Task 1:

Based on the information you have just gathered take part in a critical discussion on the following topic. Form groups of four and talk for 20 minutes.

Material: Lifestyles

Hamburgers, french fries, and soft drinks are typical fast food items

Neighboring fast food restaurant advertisement signs in Bowling Green, Kentucky

Average per capita energy consumption of the world from 1961 to 2002

A graph showing a gradual increase in global food energy consumption per person per day between 1961 and 2002.
By James Heilman, MDOwn work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link