Obesity weighing down UK workforce – study

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Obesity weighing down UK workforce – study

Researchers say extra weight is keeping over 600,000 Britons out of work, particularly men

Obesity may be keeping more than half a million people out of work in Britain, a new research presented at the International Congress on Obesity in Mexico has found.

Scientists from the University of York analyzed data from 284,258 UK Biobank participants – working-age men (38-65) and women (38-60) – and found obesity reduced the probability of being employed by 4.2 percentage points. Among those studied, the overall employment rate was 75.5%, with roughly one-quarter meeting the clinical definition of obesity – a body mass index (BMI) above 30.

The findings presented on Thursday suggest roughly four in every 100 obese people may be unemployed because of their weight alone – some 600,000 people. It also found that the effect was significantly stronger among men than women: obesity reduced men’s chances of being employed by 6.6 percentage points, compared with 2.1 percentage points for women.

Researchers warned that obesity has implications beyond public health, arguing that it also causes “substantial economic losses” by reducing workforce participation during peak working years.

According to lead author Dr Aharon Katz, “tackling obesity isn’t just a health imperative – it’s an opportunity to boost economic productivity. Because obesity affects workers in the prime years of their working lives, it may have profound effects on their working careers, individual health and societal costs.”

Katz called for targeted policies and workplace initiatives to raise awareness, reduce bias, and improve inclusivity.

Previous research cited in the study also linked obesity to higher sickness absence and lower wages, estimating that it costs the UK around £31 billion ($41.6 billion) annually in lost productivity and about £126 billion in total economic and societal costs.


READ MORE: Britain suffers biggest wealth slump since Covid-19 – UBS

Around two-thirds of UK adults are overweight or obese, with obesity rates having doubled since the 1990s and increasingly linked to major health risks.

Last month, the British Heart Foundation estimated that obesity contributes to around one in nine cardiovascular deaths in England and warned that weight-related heart disease could claim about 170,000 lives by 2035. An April study by the Institute of Cancer Research and Imperial College London also identified excess weight as a key driver of rising cancer rates among younger adults.

Meanwhile, Britain faces an ongoing economic and cost-of-living crisis which contributes to slow economic growth and the steepest decline in household wealth since the Covid-19 pandemic.

The findings come as the UK government pilots programs offering weight-loss injections to unemployed people in an effort to help more of them return to work. Some recent studies suggest that workers prescribed the medications took 45% fewer sick days after nine months of treatment, while other researchers estimated that wider access could free up nearly 10 million GP appointments and reduce obesity-related emergency hospital visits by a quarter.

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