More than 41,000 overweight patients including seven teenagers needed new hips ...

More than 41,000 overweight patients including seven teenagers needed new hips or knees last year, investigation finds Seven teenage girls aged 15 to 19 had hip replacements due to obesity last year Joint operations are thought to have cost more than £200million to the NHS Experts and MPs said statistics should send 'shock waves' and are 'horrifying' 

By Bryony Jewell For Mailonline

Published: 02:02 GMT, 6 January 2019 | Updated: 08:01 GMT, 6 January 2019

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More than 41,000 overweight patients including seven teenage girls needed new hips or knees last year, an investigation has found. 

In the past 12 months 25,577 patients had knee replacements and 16,184 had hip operations where obesity was a major factor behind the decision for surgery.

These joint replacement operations cost around £5,000 each and over 40,000 procedures were carried out in 2017-2018, reports the Sunday Times.

Of the thousands having hip replacements last year, seven were for teenage girls aged between 15 and 19.  

In the past 12 months 25,577 patients had knee replacements and 16,184, including teenagers, had hip operations where obesity was a major reason for the surgery  (file picture)

In the past 12 months 25,577 patients had knee replacements and 16,184, including teenagers, had hip operations where obesity was a major reason for the surgery  (file picture)

Tam Fry, chairman of the National Obesity forum said the fact teenagers were included in the numbers was 'horrifying.'

He said: 'Tragically, more and more adults and children are going to require joint replacements in the years to come.' 

Jon Ashworth, the shadow health secretary, said: 'The fact that even teenage girls have had hip replacements because of obesity should send shock waves through ministers' offices.'

The Sunday Times statistics show the number of patients having replacement surgery's has soared from 6,191 in 2009-10 to 41,761 in 2017-18.

The findings have brought new calls for obesity to be reclassified as a disease. 

Obesity is a growing problem in the UK and around the world, with almost half of Britons and one in five people worldwide expected to be extremely fat by 2045.

Research last year also found a quarter of adults don't do enough exercise, with 1.4billion of us leading inactive lives.

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