Campaigners ask government to tackle three biggest killers
A campaign group is calling on the government to tackle preventable illnesses and relieve pressure on the NHS by focusing on alcohol, smoking and obesity.
Using a nationally representative survey by Public First for Action and Smoking on Health, the Alcohol Health Alliance, and the Obesity Health Alliance, the organisations found widespread concern about the health impact of these habits in the North West.
In Blackburn with Darwen, there were 34 deaths caused by alcohol in 2023, while 30.8 per cent of the population was deemed to be obese.
It was also revealed that 19.4 per cent of adults in the borough smoked in 2022.
Data produced by the campaigners revealed that 52 per cent put the NHS in their top three most important issues in government.
Within this, 88 per cent believe tobacco contributes to pressure on NHS services, and 86 per cent of respondents thought both alcohol and unhealthy food contribute.
The survey also said 79 per cent of people agreed with levies on tobacco companies, 72 per cent on unhealthy food companies and 62 per cent on similar levies for alcohol manufactures.
Executive at Action on Smoking and Health said: 'People in the North West — like people across the country — have lost trust in industries that profit from harm, and they want to see the government do more to prevent poor health, as they promised to when elected.
'People are clear: when it comes to protecting our health and relieving pressure on the NHS, businesses must be held to account.
'This research shows strong support for bold, evidence-based action to tackle the damage caused by tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy food. Now is the time for a joined-up prevention strategy that puts public health first."
READ MORE: Excess belly fat 'impairs learning, memory and emotion control in teenagers'
READ MORE: Organisations urge Prime Minister to tackle 'root causes' of poor mental health
Across the UK, alcohol, obesity and smoking are responsible for tens of thousands of cancer cases and cut short millions of lives.
All three organisations behind the survey are now urging ministers to take stronger preventive action.
Katharine Jenner, Director, Obesity Health Alliance, said: 'A healthy population is the foundation of a strong economy, yet we're constantly bombarded with unhealthy food and drink on our screens, our streets, and even outside school gates.
'While some companies are making changes—reformulating products, cutting sugar, and removing junk food from checkouts—there needs to be more urgency.
'If there's a choice between business growth and public health, 79 per cent of people in the North West agree: government should put health first.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'This is fantastic news for our NHS trust' - hospital trust gets £6.5 million
A YORK hospital trust is set to get £6.5 million in Government funding to help fix its crumbling buildings. York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - which runs hospitals in York, Selby, Malton, Scarborough and Bridlington, is getting £6.5 million from the national Estates Safety Fund as part of the Government's mission to fix public service infrastructure through its Plan for Change. The money is going to hospitals and schools across the country and includes works to the roof as well as improvements to the internal and external building fabric and fixtures at Scarborough Hospital. Mayor of York and North Yorkshire, David Skaith said: "For too long, people have had to put up with leaking hospital roofs, crumbling classroom walls, and public buildings left to decay. Staff working in rundown facilities. "Children learning in classrooms patched up year after year. Patients treated in spaces that are barely fit for purpose. It's not good enough and people deserve so much better. "That's why I welcome the news that over £8 million is being invested in our hospitals in Scarborough, York and Harrogate, alongside millions more for schools - including in our region - as part of a Government programme to make public buildings fit for the future. "Our NHS staff, our children, and their teachers deserve so much better than a decade of decline. This is just the first step - but we're committed to rebuilding the modern, safe, and dignified public services our communities deserve.' Scarborough Hospital The Government says that fixing the backlog of maintenance at NHS hospitals will help prevent operation cancellations. Luke Charters, MP for York Outer, said the investment will help improve hospital infrastructure, enhance patient safety, and support vital upgrades to ensure high-quality healthcare delivery for local communities. 'This is fantastic news for our local NHS trust. I'm proud to support the hardworking staff at York and Scarborough hospitals, who go above and beyond every day for patients. This funding will make a real difference — it will improve safety, modernise our buildings and help ensure our hospitals can continue delivering for residents across York," he said. "Investment in our local NHS is not just investment in buildings – it's investment in the health and wellbeing of everyone in York. I will continue to fight for further support to make sure our local health services get the backing they need. "This extra investment comes from the Estates Safety Fund, a national strategy to upgrade and maintain hospital facilities ensuring that NHS buildings can adapt to future healthcare demands. "This alongside waiting lists coming down for 6 months in a row, is the true difference a Labour government makes."


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Indivior Plans to Cancel London Listing After Moving Primary to US
Indivior Plc said it plans to cancel its secondary listing in London nearly a year after the drugmaker shifted its primary trading to the US, marking the latest departure from the UK's capital markets. The opioid-addiction therapy maker moved its main listing to New York last year in search of more analyst and investor coverage, but had a rocky start amid guidance cuts. It's planning to ditch the secondary trading it had maintained on the London Stock Exchange to better reflect where its revenues come from and eliminate the cost of the secondary listing, given most of its volume and investors are now in the US, according to a statement.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
'Our honeymoon money paid for my husband's funeral'
Two young widows who lost their husbands to heart conditions have launched a podcast about their experiences. Laura Burr, 31, from Banbury, Oxfordshire, and Gabby Evans, 32, from Burnley, have previously campaigned to lower the age of NHS health checks. Mrs Burr, whose husband died six months after their wedding, said the weekly podcast would deal with "raw emotions and real lives". She told the first episode: "I literally had to spend the money me and Ed had earmarked for a honeymoon on his funeral." Her husband fell ill on the day after their wedding in April 2024 and was diagnosed shortly afterwards with dilated cardiomyopathy, which inhibits blood circulation. He died in October at the age of 32 while waiting for a heart transplant. Ms Evans' partner Tom Brakewell, who was 34, died suddenly at home in January 2025 with an undiagnosed heart condition. The widows, who have never met in person, previously joined forces to launch an online petition to lower the age - currently 40 - at which the NHS starts to invite patients for full health screening. Mrs Burr said: "I fully believe if health checks were mandatory and Edward had gone for a health MOT between 25 and 30 his heart issue would have been flagged and he would still be here." The pair released The Podcast That Shouldn't Exist on Wednesday. In the first episode, Mrs Burr told how she walked down the aisle at the wedding and the funeral to the same music, from her husband's favourite film series Lord Of The Rings. Ms Evans described her fantasy that her partner would leap up and "jump scare" her at the chapel of rest. The pair said the podcast was "a space we never asked to create about a club no-one wants to join". In response to the widows' campaign, the Department of Health and Social Care said: "Our deepest sympathies are with the families of Edward and Tom. "The NHS's life-saving health checks are targeted towards those at higher risk, preventing around 500 heart attacks and strokes every year and stopping people developing a range of diseases. "To increase availability and uptake of the checks, we are developing a new online service that eligible people can use at home to understand their risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes." You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram. Widow calls for health checks for younger people Plan for workplace health checks to curb heart disease GPs given freedom to order heart checks direct