Too much food, too much alcohol, too many drugs and too much sex has created a "timebomb" of health problems that will do lasting harm to a generation and place mounting pressure on the National Health Service, the Conservatives say.
They accused the Government of "neglect" over the issue and said Britain's "broken society" was to blame. Using official NHS and Department of Health figures, party researchers detailed the growing toll on teenage health of unhealthy and illegal behaviour including:
- The number of teenagers admitted to hospital for alcohol-related treatment in 2006-07 was 12,682 – up 51 per cent since 2000-01;
- Admissions relating to smoking tobacco rose 41 per cent;
- From 2003 to 2007, the number of teenagers treated for sexual infections rose 21 per cent;
- The number of teenage girls having abortions rose 15 per cent from 2003;
- In 2006-07, a third of children turning 13 were obese or overweight. The data suggest that some social and health problems are growing fastest among younger teenagers.
Drug-related hospital admissions among 11-15 year olds rose 33 per cent from 2000. Smoking-related admissions were up 63 per cent.
The nationwide figures for England mask sharp regional disparities, with the North reporting worse figures on almost every front.Sexual infections rose by 58 per cent among teenagers in the North East, for example, compared with three per cent in the West Midlands.
Teenage abortions were up 30 per cent in the North West, but down two per cent in London. The capital has the fattest children, with 36 per cent recorded as obese or overweight on entering Year Six at school. The English average was 31 per cent.
Andrew Lansley, the shadow health secretary, said: "Labour are neglecting a forgotten generation of teenagers. It's a sad indictment of our broken society that so many are turning to things like drug and alcohol abuse at such a young age.
"And these figures only highlight the worst cases – the young people that end up in hospital. The true toll on teenagers' lives is far higher.
"The Government needs to take action now, before it's too late. The NHS needs a robust strategy to improve public health – like the one we proposed last year, with ring-fenced budgets and proper accountability. And we must do more to tackle the wider causes of social breakdown.
"That means we need to strengthen families, radically reform the welfare system and provide more good school places."
Treating teenagers' for the effects of drink, drugs, sexual infections and abortion costs the NHS an estimated £130 million per year – up from around £100 million in 2000.
The figure does not include the bill for dealing with obese patients
[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/2621623/Teenage-health-timebomb-threatens-NHS.html]
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