Armchair Olympics fuels obesity fears in China
BEIJING (Reuters) - Armchair athletics may not be an Olympic sport but it's the most popular activity in China this month, fuelling concerns about rising obesity rates.
Chinese media has even given its army of TV Olympic spectators a name -- otaku -- a Japanese word that means "venerable house" and usually refers to someone nerdy who is totally devoted to a hobby to the point of not leaving home.
Figures have shown about 840 million of China's 1.3 billion population tuned in to watch the August 8 opening ceremony of the Beijing Games and interest is expected to stay high to August 24.
Increased TV viewing, less physical jobs and a shift away from a traditional Chinese diet rich in vegetables and carbohydrates with little animal-sourced food to a more Western diet heavier in meat, eggs and dairy has piled on the pounds.
"Lots of mothers don't know what to feed their children anymore," said Zhao Hua, who was having lunch with her 6-year-old son Tanning at a massive McDonald's in the Olympics site.
"In the past it was good to be a bit fat because it was a sign of strength but now children are getting too fat."
Figures show about a quarter of Chinese adults are obese or overweight, which is lower than many other countries but has jumped from 13 percent in 1991 with forecasts it could double by 2028.
By comparison World Health Organization figures show 65 percent of adult Americans in 2005 were overweight or obese. Continued...

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