BEIJING, Sept. 20 -- More men are obese and an
increasing number of students have poor eyesight, a national physical fitness
survey has found.
About one in 10 (9.3 percent) of male adults between
20 and 59 suffer from obesity, up 22 percent over 2000 when the country released
its first National Physical Fitness Report.
In the 40-59 age group, the rate sands at 11.7
percent, according to the latest report made public on Monday by the General
Administration of Sport.
The administration, along with nine other central
government departments, randomly sampled 245,035 people across the country.
The overweight rate of male adults has reached 33.2
percent, up 1.3 percentage point.
But in the same age group of female adults, obesity
and overweight rates remain much the same as in 2000.
The obesity rate among students has also increased by
at least 1 percentage point, while strength and stamina are on the decline,
according to the report.
"Chinese youth have been suffering from a steadily
deteriorating health condition over the past 20 years", said Yang Guiren, a
senior official in the Ministry of Education.
He blamed the phenomenon on changes in traditional
diet, reduced physical activity and increasingly sedentary lifestyles.
He cited a survey which shows that about 60 percent
of students do not exercise regularly, and 29 percent of them said they do not
have time for it.
Meanwhile, three in 10 (31 percent) of primary school
pupils are near-sighted, up 8.5 percentage points from 2000. The rate rises as
the age increases, with the highest hitting 82 percent in college students.
To improve physical health, the Ministry of Education
has urged primary and middle schools nationwide to increase PE classes and to
ensure that students are given time for physical training every day.
However, the overall picture is brighter. The
composite index of national physical fitness, with main measurements such as
body size, strength and physical activity, has increased by 0.75 percent over
2000.
Sheng Zhiguo, an official with the sports
administration, said the survey provides a "systematic report on the status quo
and pattern of change".
The report also indicates that urban Chinese are more
physically fit than rural people. Geographically speaking, residents of
Shanghai, Jiangsu, Shandong, Guangxi and Beijing have the highest composite
index, while Xinjiang, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet, the lowest.
"It shows that national physical fitness has a
geographical distribution high in the east and low in the west," Sheng said,
citing the gaps in income and living conditions as major reasons.
(Source: China Daily)