According to data from the Office for Public Health Improvement & Disparities (OHID), North Lincolnshire had an obesity rate of 37.1%, with North East Lincolnshire at 34.7% - well above the England-wide average of 25.9%.
The festival kicks off in three weeks, with gates opening on Wednesday, 26 June.Tickets sold out in October, but full coverage will be available on BBC radio and television as well as BBC Sounds and iPlayer.
Highlights are expected to include country star Shania Twain in the Sunday teatime "legend slot" and pop superstar Cyndi Lauper making her Pyramid Stage debut.The singer recently announced her farewell tour, 41 years after her breakthrough hit Girls Just Wanna Have Fun.Other acts on the bill include dance giants Disclosure and Justice, pop stars Jessie Ware and Sugababes, and rappers Little Simz and D-Block Europe.
A surprise set will also take place at 18:00 on Saturday 29 June, on the Woodsies stage.In previous years, acts like The Killers, Radiohead, Foo Fighters and George Ezra have popped up in those secret slots. Speculation about this year's guest will undoubtedly run rife at Worthy Farm until the moment they take to the stage.
Glastonbury has also revealed the stage times for every act, allowing fans to plan their trip - amid the inevitable, excruciating clashes between their favourite acts.
Dance fans face a tough choice on Friday night, for example, when Jungle go up against Jamie XX.That is generating "more complicated commissions" and "driving the need" to expand Goodwood to have more space, Rolls-Royce chief executive Chris Brownridge told Radio 4's Today programme.
But making individually tailored cars, while profitable, is a labour-intensive process that requires time and space.At the same time, like other manufacturers, the company is preparing for a future in which conventional cars will be phased out and replaced by electric models.
In the UK, the Labour government has committed to phasing out sales of petrol and diesel cars by 2030, and is consulting car manufacturers on how that will work.Mr Brownridge declined to tell the BBC whether the firm would still be building cars with combustion engines for clients abroad in 2030, but said the firm had a "very clear roadmap" and that electric cars were the "right direction for Rolls-Royce".