B.C.’s soda drink tax will help kids lose weight, improve health, says doctor
VICTORIA — Children’s health in British Columbia will benefit from the provincial government’s decision to tax sugary soda drinks, says the chairman of the Childhood Obesity Foundation.
Dr. Tom Warshawski said Wednesday studies show sugary drinks contribute to obesity, a leading cause of Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and hypertension, and health outcomes have improved in jurisdictions where sugar taxes are levied.
Finance Minister Carole James announced in her budget Tuesday that the seven per cent provincial sales tax will now be added to carbonated drinks that have sugar. The tax takes effect on July 1 and is forecast to generate $27 million in revenues in the 2020-2021 budget year.
Warshawski, a consulting pediatrician from Kelowna, said sugar drinks are not healthy and the tax will shift people to choose healthy drinks like water. Warshawski said it may take a decade to collect data on improved health results for children in B.C., but he’s seen remarkable changes with young patients who cut out sugary drinks.