When a cheeseburger costs less than a box of strawberries, it is no surprise that teenagers are reaching more for fast food than fresh fruit.
But a new study led by the University of South Australia warns that it is not just diet causing concern. Teens are increasingly caught in a cycle of unhealthy lifestyle habits that could have long-term effects on their health.
The study, which analysed data from more than 293,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17 across 73 countries and five World Health Organization regions, found alarming trends in teenage behaviour:
In fact, only a tiny fraction – less than 1 per cent – reported no unhealthy behaviours at all.
The clustering effect
Researchers described this as a “clustering of unhealthy habits”, where teens are not just struggling with one risk factor, but often two, three or more. According to the study: