Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Type of food and drink that ‘kills 370,000 people every year in Europe’

Must read

Three types of food and drink are to blame for 370,000 deaths each year in Europe, according to the WHO. Experts have blamed ‘powerful industries’ for driving ill health

There are calls for more regulation on junk foods(Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Ultra-processed foods, alcohol, tobacco, and fossil fuels are wreaking havoc across Europe, claiming 2.7 million lives annually, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has revealed.

Experts have blamed at “powerful industries” for driving ill health and premature deaths by meddling in government policies aimed at reducing cancer, heart disease, and diabetes rates. The WHO’s latest report is calling for “strict regulation to curb industry power” and urging governments to push through health policies that are often “challenged, delayed, weakened or stopped” by these industries.




According to WHO, “more than 7,400 people are dying every day” in its European region due to harmful products and practices “driven by commercial industry”. The report highlights that these commercial products are linked to 24 per cent of all deaths, with a staggering 51.4 per cent from cardiovascular diseases and 46.4 per cent from cancer. In total, tobacco, alcohol, ultra-processed food, and fuel industries contribute to or are directly responsible for 2.7 million deaths each year in Europe.

Globally, the situation is just as dire, with tobacco, ultra-processed foods, fossil fuels, and alcohol causing 19 million deaths annually, accounting for 34 per cent of all deaths worldwide. Breaking it down further, WHO attributes 1.15 million deaths per year in Europe to smoking, 426,857 to alcohol, 117,290 to diets high in processed meats, and 252,187 to diets high in salt.

These figures don’t even take into account deaths caused by obesity, high blood pressure, high blood sugar or high cholesterol level all of which are linked to unhealthy diets, according to the report. The study urged governments to be aware of the tactics used by industry such as blaming individuals, marketing, spreading disinformation, promotions on social media, lobbying and “subverting science” like funding research that promotes their goals, reports Bristol Live.

The WHO stated that the “primary interest of all major corporations is profit”, and having a large market share “often also translates into political power”. It continued: “Regardless of the product they sell, their (industry) interests do not align with either public health or the broader public interest. Any policy that could impact their sales and profits is therefore a threat, and they should play no role in the development of that policy.”

The report noted that, apart from rules around tobacco, “global efforts to regulate harmful marketing have, at best, been underwhelming”. It further added: “While legal measures regulating alcohol and unhealthy food marketing are in existence in several countries across the WHO European region and across the world, these are often narrow in scope, focused on specific media or settings, certain population groups or on specific marketing techniques, and therefore confer insufficient protection.”

Additionally, the World Health Organisation (WHO) mentioned that self-regulating industry norms have proven ineffective. Dr Hans Kluge, WHO’s regional director for Europe, stated: “Four industries kill at least 7,000 people in our region every day. The same large commercial entities block regulation that would protect the public from harmful products and marketing, and protect health policy from industry interference.

Latest article