Instant noodle diets harming SE Asian children
A DIET heavy on cheap, modern food like instant noodles that fills bellies but lacks key nutrients has left millions of children unhealthily thin or overweight in Southeast Asia, experts say.
The Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia have booming economies and rising standards of living, yet many working parents do not have the time, money or awareness to steer clear of food hurting their kids.
In those three nations, an average of 40 per cent of children aged five and below are malnourished, higher than the global average of one-in-three, according to a report out on Tuesday from Unicef, the UN children’s agency.
“Parents believe that filling their children’s stomach is the most important thing. They don’t think about an adequate intake of protein, calcium or fibre,” Hasbullah Thabrany, a public health expert in Indonesia said.
Unicef said the harm done to children is both a symptom of past deprivation and a predictor of future poverty, while iron deficiency impairs a child’s ability to learn and raises a woman’s risk of death during or shortly after childbirth.
To give some sense of scale to the problem, Indonesia had 24.4 million children under five last year, while the Philippines had 11 million and Malaysia 2.6 million, Unicef data show.
Mueni Mutunga, Unicef Asia nutrition specialist, traced the trend back to families ditching traditional diets for affordable, accessible and easy-to-prepare “modern” meals.
“Noodles are easy. Noodles are cheap. Noodles are quick and an easy substitute for what should have been a balanced diet,” she said.
The noodles, which cost as litt le as 23 US cents a packet in Manila, are low on essential nutrients and micronutrient s l i ke i ron a nd a re a lso protein-def icient while having high fat and sa lt content, Mutunga added.
Indonesia was the world’s second-biggest consumer of instant noodles, behind China, with 12.5 billion servings last year, according to the World Instant Noodles Association.
The figure is more than the total consumed by India and Japan put together.
T houg h t he Ph i l ippi nes, Indonesia a nd Malaysia a re all considered middle-income c ou nt r ie s by World Ba n k measures, tens of millions of their people struggle to make enough money to live.
“Poverty is the key issue,” said T Jayabalan, a public health expert in Malaysia, adding that households where both parents work need quickly made meals.
Low-income households in Malaysia depend largely on ready-made noodles, sweet potatoes and soya-based products as their major meals, he said.
Sugar-rich biscuits, beverages and fast food also pose problems in these countries, according to experts.
Rolling back the influence instant noddles have on the daily lives, and health, of people in Southeast Asia will likely require government intervention, they said.
“Promotion and advertising is extremely aggressive,” said Thabrany, the Indonesian public health expert.
“There is massive distribution. They [instant noodles] are available everywhere, even in the most remote places.”