Health & Lifestyle

NHS is dealing with 3,000 ward admissions for obesity EVERY DAY with patient numbers doubling in just six years

  • New NHS data shows a record 1.2 obesity-related hospital admissions per year
  • This is twice as many as 2016/17, which saw 617,000 admissions
  • Britain’s obesity crisis is now costing us £100billion a year 

The NHS is being forced to deal with 3,000 admissions related to obesity every day, twice as many as it was six years ago, new data has revealed. 

The latest NHS Digital data for England shows a record 1.2million admissions to hospitals where obesity was a factor in 2022/23, up from 617,000 in 2016/17 – or the equivalent of as many as 3,000 a day.

The 1.2million figure includes nearly 9,000 where obesity was the main reason for admissions, most of which were for bariatric surgery such as gastric bypasses, The Times reported. 

For several hundred thousand admissions obesity was attributed to a patient’s stay in hospital or complicating treatment.

Nearly 8,300 children under 16 were admitted to hospital for obesity, more than double the figure of 4,062 in 2016/17.

The latest NHS Digital data for England shows a record 1.2million admissions to hospitals where obesity was a factor in 2022/23 (File image)

The latest NHS Digital data for England shows a record 1.2million admissions to hospitals where obesity was a factor in 2022/23 (File image)

Those in poorer areas were twice as likely to be taken to hospital for obesity-related issues as those in richer areas. In the most deprived ten areas of England, there were nearly 3,400 admissions per 100,000 people for obesity, more than twice the 1,430 in the richest ten.

Luton had the worst rates, with the city having nearly 4,900 admissions per 100,000.

Gloucestershire, Southampton, Salford, Rotherham, Bradford and much of east London all had rates above 4,000. Bracknell Forest in Berkshire had an admission rate of 420 per 100,000, while Windsor, Wokingham, Slough, Oxfordshire, Reading and Brighton had rates below 1,000.

Pregnant women have the highest likelihood of having obesity a complicating factor, with 147,143 maternity admissions where obesity was a problem for either mothers or children. 

The new data comes after it was revealed that Britain’s obesity crisis now costs the country nearly £100billion per year, according to a shock analysis that has sparked calls for ministers to tackle the scourge of junk food with the same aggressiveness as smoking.

Two thirds of all adults are now fat, compared to just half in the mid-90s. Of those, a quarter are obese.

Until now, it was thought the entirely reversible problem cost Britain in the region of £60billion.

This figure included the cost of the knock-on effects of being obese and the impact on the NHS, as well as the secondary costs like lost earnings from time off work due to illness and early deaths.


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