Billions of people exposed to toxic trans fat: WHO
Geneva, Switzerland - Efforts to eliminate industrially-produced fat have a long way to go with five billion people exposed to toxic fat added to many food products, the UN health agency said on Monday.
The World Health Organization called in 2018 for harmful trans fatty acids to be wiped out by 2023.
They are thought to be responsible for around 500,000 premature deaths from coronary heart disease each year.
Although 43 countries with combined populations of 2.8bn people have now implemented best-practice policies, most of the world remains unprotected, it said.
WHO acknowledged in an annual progress report that the goal was still out of sight.
Industrially-produced trans fat is often used in packaged foods, baked goods, cooking oils and spreads.
“Trans fat has no known benefit, and huge health risks that incur huge costs for health systems,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.
“By contrast, eliminating trans fat is cost effective and has enormous benefits for health,” he said. “Put simply, trans fat is a toxic chemical that kills, and should have no place in food. It’s time to get rid of it once and for all.”
The WHO said that nine of the 16 countries with the highest estimated proportion of coronary heart disease deaths caused by trans fat intake were not implementing bestpractice policies.
They include Australia, Azerbaijan, Bhutan, Ecuador, Egypt, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan and South Korea.
Francesco Branca, the WHO’S nutrition and food safety director, told reporters
that trans fat elimination policies were in place in 60 countries, covering 3.4bn people or 43 per cent of the world’s population. Of those countries, 43 are implementing best practice standards.
Best practice means either a mandatory national limit of two grammes of industriallyproduced trans fat per 100 grammes of total fat in all foods; or a national ban on the production or use of partiallyhydrogenated oils, which are a major source of trans fat.