Japan brings in compulsory fat checks for over-40s
Friday, March 28, 2008
Once the butt of jokes, the sight of men sucking in their bellies to hide
expanding waistlines just got a lot more serious in Japan, where the
government has introduced mandatory "fat checks" for the over-40s.
Aimed at trimming bulging annual health costs of more than $3bn (£1.5bn),
the Health Ministry says from next month 56 million people must start
keeping waistlines tucked in or be asked to change diet, see a doctor and
possibly pay higher insurance costs.
But critics say the plan for the potbelly police, which sets a waist limit
of 85cm (34in) for men and 90cm for women, will do more harm than good.
"It's a comedy," Professor Yoichi Ogushi told The Japan Times. "If you
follow the government's logic, you can do whatever you want as long as you
have a slim waist."
Although mostly spared the obesity epidemic that plagues many Western
nations, Japan is struggling with a recent rise in lifestyle illnesses,
especially among the middle-aged.
This is being linked to a widespread shift from the traditional Japanese
diet – based around fish, rice and vegetables, and including little red
meat, dairy and processed foods – towards a more "modern", Western diet.
Japanese men are faring worse than women: government statistics show that
men are now 10 per cent heavier than they were 10 years ago, and the average
woman's weight has increased by 6.4 per cent.
The Health Ministry says 27 million people now either suffer from, or are at
risk of, high blood pressure, blood sugars and cholesterol, collectively
known as metabolic syndrome, or "metabo" in the popular media.
Fear of the condition, and its associated diseases of strokes, heart attacks
and diabetes, is behind a wave of new health fads and crash diets. With half
of all men aged 40 to 74 sufferers, one estimate is that the market for
"anti-metabo" services such as private health guidance and fat farms could
soon reach 100 billion yen.
It seems appropriate that the country known for its love of cutting-edge
technology should be seeking equally innovative,and expensive, ways to lose
weight. Popular new fitness crazes include the Joba, a bucking-bronco style
exercise machine that promises to lighten dieter's wallets by £700 a time,
and the £20,000 Metabology Diet System, a space-age machine that subjects
users to electric currents and steam.
The fight-the-flab campaign has already claimed at least one victim. Last
year, a 74-year-old local government official in rural Mie Prefecture
collapsed while jogging in an effort to cut his 100cm waist. He was in the
government's weight-loss programme.
"We have to bring medical costs down," said Toshi-yuki Sato, a spokesman for
the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, who denied the plan would
encourage crash-dieting and pill-popping. "Dieting badly will eventually
cause medical costs to rise even more, so we hope the metabolic tests will
be properly supervised."
Plans for a 25 per cent cut in metabo ranks by 2011 bothers some. "Fat
people will be criticised by skinny people, old people by the young and
companies will refuse to hire overweight people," said Katsura Sigiura, 37,
a Tokyo construction engineer who says he is "borderline" tubby. "It makes
me angry that the government has started this without consulting us."