The Sun (Malaysia)

Industry ‘leveraging pandemic’ to peddle unhealthy products: NGOs

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FOOD and drink producers are leveraging the coronaviru­s pandemic to push unhealthy products such as alcohol, sugar-laden soft drinks and fatty fast food on consumers, an internatio­nal coalition of health charities said Thursday.

Crowd-sourced research conducted by the Non-Communicab­le Disease Alliance raised concerns that food giants are fuelling increases in chronic conditions such as diabetes and heart disease – themselves known Covid-19 risk factors.

Hundreds of examples reported from more than 90 countries included beer companies adapting their logos to suggest improved health, burger companies geo-tracking customers with the promise of free food, and soft drink giants donating cans to struggling communitie­s.

Authors of the report, compiled jointly with the University of Edinburgh, accused food and drink behemoths of knowingly exacerbati­ng the impact of Covid-19 on high-risk constituen­ts, including obese individual­s and smokers.

Lucy Westerman, police and campaigns manager with the NCD Alliance, said the survey had thrown up two clear trends.

“The growing epidemiolo­gical evidence that people living with NCDs are suffering worse outcomes from Covid-19, and that many producers of unhealthy commoditie­s have rapidly adapted their strategies in an attempt to capitalise on the pandemic and lockdowns,” she said.

So-called NCDs such as diabetes, hypertensi­on and lung disease are the world’s biggest killers, leading to 40 million deaths every year. More than two billion people are overweight or obese, which carries a higher risk of a host of health complicati­ons.

Of more than 750 examples submitted by contributo­rs of what the NCD Alliance called “corporate capture” by food and drink companies, the most were reported in Britain and the United States.

But there were also numerous signs of the alleged influence of corporate lobbying pushing policy-makers to keep the sale of alcohol, tobacco and fast food even during near-total lockdowns. – AFP-Relaxnews

 ??  ?? Katie Dain, CEO of the NCD Alliance, called for tighter regulation on how companies market unhealthy products.
Katie Dain, CEO of the NCD Alliance, called for tighter regulation on how companies market unhealthy products.

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