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Britain’s ‘unhealthiest high streets’ revealed: The shopping districts where fast food outlets, ice cream parlours and sweet shops reign supreme

Britain’s ‘unhealthiest high streets’, where shoppers are treated to an array of fast food outlets, ice cream parlours and takeaways have been revealed.

A survey carried out by Chemist4U scanned the country’s most populated cities to discover which streets had the highest number of unhealthy shops operating within a 500-metre radius.

Topping the poll is St Peter’s Street in Derby, where nearly half of the shops (46.1 per cent) comprise either fast food outlets, ice cream parlors, confectioneries or bakeries.

Meanwhile Hales Street in Coventry was found to have 44 out of 104 stores (42.3 per cent) offering calorific options.

Moving towards the coast, Southend’s High Street offers more than a third (38.1 per cent) of diet-busting options to residents and visitors.

New Street in Birmingham has 141 unhealthy stores out of 383 (36.8 per cent), while Newport’s High Street boasts 87 businesses out of 248, or just over a third (35.1 per cent), selling junk food.

The new research comes in the wake of a 59 per cent increase in fast food outlets appearing in UK high streets over the last decade.

And one in five adults (26.2 per cent) in England are currently thought to be living with obesity, according to the latest Government figures.

Britain's 'unhealthiest' high street: Nearly half of the shops (46.1 per cent) in St Peter's Street, Derby comprise either fast food outlets, ice cream parlors, confectioneries or bakeries
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Britain’s ‘unhealthiest’ high street: Nearly half of the shops (46.1 per cent) in St Peter’s Street, Derby comprise either fast food outlets, ice cream parlors, confectioneries or bakeries

One in five adults (26.2 per cent) in England are currently thought to be living with obesity, according to the latest Government figures

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View gallery

One in five adults (26.2 per cent) in England are currently thought to be living with obesity, according to the latest Government figures

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