Audio By Carbonatix
A Nutritionist at Nestlé Ghana has blamed the traffic congestion during the morning rush hour as a major cause of childhood obesity in the country.
Dr Margaret Mary Tohoueno, who describes the situation as worrying, explained that parents leave home very early to make it to work on time due to the gridlock traffic situations experienced during the morning in the major cities.
This, she said, makes parents rush out of home, thus paying very little attention to the quality of food served to the children before leaving home for work.

Dr Margaret Tohoueno made this known on Joy FM's Super Morning Show on Thursday, May 5.
According to her, most parents leave home at dawn, and children are taken along and dropped off at school and sometimes given money to buy street food, which mostly is not well-balanced in terms of nutrients.
Dr Margaret Mary Tohoueno said this contributes mainly to childhood obesity.
“Our cities are expanding, and people are moving from rural areas to the cities. One would wake up at dawn to drive from Tema to Accra, and one would have to endure the traffic situation before arriving in Accra.
"Both parents are working, so they are not at home, so the kids are getting to school very early and come back very late in the evening.”

“So all these put together is causing dietary patterns to shift. They give money to the kids to buy food when they get to school, and they use it to buy these pieces of stuff which may not be a balanced diet they buy when they get to school.”
She also said because most children in the urban cities don’t do house chores in the morning before leaving home for school, they lack the needed exercise to break down the calories they consume.
“The other thing is looking at the ways, especially children in the urban areas live today, so in the morning, the child is prepared to go to school, and most of them don’t do any house chores. So they are ready and fed and taken to school in a car.

At school, they get the opportunity maybe at break time to play, and that is when they take their snack without getting the chance to play, and they are back to the classroom, and at lunchtime, they have a lunch break, which is around 45 minutes, that’s when they will take the main meal.
"And right after school, they are carried home again in a vehicle and usually when they are going home, there is a lot of homework that they have been given, so they go, they sit for an hour or more doing the homework throughout, because they may not be allowed to go out to play."
"So they get to be on screens, be it a tablet or television, so the day is spent sitting at one place,” she noted.
Latest Stories
-
Hamamat and Wiyaala land tourism ambassadorial roles
32 minutes -
A singer’s tragic death highlights Nigeria’s snakebite problem
1 hour -
Mikel Arteta: Arsenal’s 9-point lead at top of Premier League means ‘nothing’
2 hours -
Japan votes in snap election as PM Takaichi takes a gamble
2 hours -
Bloodshed in Kpandai as rival chieftaincy factions clash over gravel pit
3 hours -
Vote-buying allegations: Refer Ayawaso East incident to OSP — Mussa Dankwah tells Mahama
4 hours -
Government plots audacious 180,000-hectare coconut expansion to dominate global markets
4 hours -
AMA doubles sweepers’ wages to GH₵800
5 hours -
Ashie Moore admits defeat in war against vote buying
6 hours -
UniMAC mourns with family as student killed in road crash is laid to rest
6 hours -
Bribery scandal rocks NDC Ayawaso East primary as IMANI President demands total annulment
6 hours -
Pollster Mussa Dankwah reacts as Baba Jamal defies projections in NDC Ayawaso East Primary
6 hours -
Government to roll out Free Primary Healthcare in the first week of April
8 hours -
UPSA launches four new programmes
8 hours -
The price of inaction: Why we must invest now to end FGM in West, Central Africa
8 hours
