Tuesday, January 19, 2016

UK plans sugar tax in hospital cafes by 2020 to tackle obesity

Britain plans to impose a "sugar tax" in hospitals and health centres across England to help tackle the growing problem of obesity and expected to generate up to 40 million pounds a year.
It would mean a 20% tax on all sugary drinks and foods in National Health Service cafes by 2020, NHS chief executive Simon Stevens told The Guardian. It is hoped the tax would discourage staff, patients and visitors from buying sugary items.
The move will make the NHS the first public body in the UK to bring in a sugar tax, and it will use the expected proceeds, between 20 million pounds and 40 million pounds a year, to improve the health of its own 1.3 million workers.
NHS bosses will begin consulting on introducing the tax, which would be gradually enforced as catering and hospital shop contracts come up for renewal over the next three to five years. "We will be consulting on introducing an NHS sugar tax on various beverages and other sugar-added foods across the NHS, which would be enforced over time as contracts for food catering and the shops that are in the foyers of hospitals come up for renewal over the next three to five years over a rolling basis," Stevens said.
"By 2020, we've either got these practices out of hospitals or we've got the equipment of a sugar tax on the back of them," he said.
The NHS levy will be linked to the UK's upcoming national childhood obesity strategy. The proposal comes days after PM David Cameron signalled he was prepared to drop his opposition to a nationwide sugar tax.

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