
20 Nov 2017
PUBLISHER: safefood
ISBN: 978-1-905767-75-5
Downloads
- What are the estimated costs of childhood overweight and obesity on the island of Ireland? – report (PDF, 1.5MB)
- What are the estimated costs of childhood overweight and obesity on the island of Ireland? – infographic (PDF, 1.25MB)
Introduction
Report

Over the past 3 decades the prevalence of overweight and obesity has increased markedly in Ireland and worldwide. In the Republic of Ireland it is currently estimated that 60% of adults and 25% of children are overweight or obese. Obesity is a chronic disorder described by the World Health Organization as a condition of abnormal or excessive fat accumulation to the extent that health may be impaired. Excess body weight is associated with a significant burden of chronic disease, with attendant negative effects on overall life expectancy, disability-free life expectancy, quality of life, healthcare costs and productivity.
While the personal and social cost of this global phenomenon are incalculable, researchers and policy makers in a number of countries have estimated the economic costs of overweight and obesity. Estimates of the economic burden of illness provide critical information for priority setting, policy development and investment in both prevention and health services. The lack of reliable data to estimate the cost of obesity in Ireland was noted in a report from the National Taskforce on Obesity (2005).
safefood is a North–South body responsible for the
promotion of food safety on the island of Ireland. It has coordinated
several major initiatives to raise awareness of the problem of
overweight and
obesity among the general public and policy makers in both jurisdictions. safefood commissioned the 2012 report The cost of overweight and obesity on the island of Ireland, which
was based on a study carried out by a research consortium with input
from specialists in public health medicine, health economics and obesity
epidemiology from the Health Service Executive (HSE), the Institute of
Public Health (IPH) in Ireland and a number of Irish universities, led
by the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College
Cork.
Infographic

In the report, the direct healthcare costs and indirect costs to society of adult overweight and obesity in 2009 were estimated at €1.13 billion for the Republic of Ireland and €510 million for Northern Ireland. In the Republic of Ireland, 35% of these costs were direct healthcare costs and 65% were indirect costs. The direct costs represent 2.7% of the total healthcare costs for 2009. For Northern Ireland, 25% of the costs were direct healthcare costs and 75% were indirect costs; the direct costs represent 2.8% of the total healthcare expenditure for 2009.
Given the scale of the estimated costs associated with current levels of excess body weight in adults, and given the high current rates of overweight and obesity in childhood, there is a clear need to address the projected lifetime costs of childhood overweight and obesity. safefood has therefore commissioned this report on current and projected lifetime costs of childhood overweight and obesity on the island of Ireland as part of its ongoing work to guide and inform our response to this public health crisis. The current study (led by Professor Ivan Perry, School of Public Health, University College Cork) is based on collaboration between University College Cork, the IPH in Ireland, the Department of Public Health, HSE Mid West, the National University of Ireland, Galway, Temple Street Children’s University Hospital and the United Kingdom (UK) Health Forum (UKHF).
Research partner Prof Kevin Balanda, Institute of Public Health in Ireland, said “This research contributes to a larger EU-funded project called JANPA that is led by the Institute of Public Health in Ireland. As well as financial costs, the research emphasises the human impact of childhood obesity and overweight. In particular, it estimated that over 85,000 children on the island will die prematurely because of childhood obesity and overweight. The estimates of lifetime costs are likely to be conservative because they do not include the psycho-social impacts on schooling, social life and work prospects and monetary value of productivity in older people. We couldn’t include these issues because relevant data is not available and more comprehensive estimates could be obtained if these gaps were filled. ”