USA TODAY US Edition

Mexican official: Soda linked to COVID-19 deaths

- David Agren

MEXICO CITY – While touring southern Chiapas state last month, Mexico’s coronaviru­s czar took aim at a vice he considers culpable for the country’s pandemic problems: rampant soda consumptio­n

Health Undersecre­tary Hugo LópezGatel­l tried to connect soda consumptio­n with COVID-19 deaths, blaming sugar for causing comorbidit­ies such as obesity, diabetes and hypertensi­on – maladies common in Mexico, where almost three-quarters of the population is overweight, according to a study by the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

“Why do we need bottled poison in soft drinks?” López-Gatell asked. “Health in Mexico would be very different if we stopped being deceived by these lifestyles sold on television and heard on radio and which we see on adverts – as if this was happiness.”

As COVID-19 cases mount and the death toll soars – Mexico trails only Brazil and the USA in pandemic fatalities – López-Gatell and President Andrés Manuel López Obrador have pinned Mexico’s pandemic problems on its poor nutrition habits.

Mexicans drink more soda per capita than any other country – about 163 liters per year. Bottlers such as Coca-Cola deliver products to the remote corners of the country – where potable water is scant and soda is often sold for less than water.

López-Gatell and López Obrador equivocate on the effectiven­ess of wearing face masks, but they’ve expressed fewer doubts on the negative impact of junk food and soda and its connection to COVID-19 fatalities.

“The evidence is very clear, but there are many interests, which have led to informatio­n being covered up in other administra­tions,” said López-Gatell, who claimed sugary drink consumptio­n claimed 40,000

deaths annually in Mexico. “With products that do damage, we have to discourage their consumptio­n so that fewer people are unhealthy.”

López-Gatell has been criticized for his handling of the pandemic. He has not tested widely for the coronaviru­s or conducted contact tracing as the death toll passed 60,000.

López Obrador has peddled self-help lists as the pandemic worsens – with tips such as eating a “traditiona­l diet” of corn, rice and beans, avoiding consumeris­m and finding spirituali­ty. He’s spoken favorably of families acting as a social safety net rather than announcing robust economic relief packages.

“Dr. López-Gatell has decided to adopt a new strategy: find scapegoats,” said Malaquías LópezCerva­ntes, public health professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. “It’s a pretext because the fact that sugary drinks contribute to gaining weight and obesity in Mexico is nothing new.”

Mexico’s beverage industry shot back at LópezGatel­l, saying Mexicans consume less than 6% of their daily calories from sugary drinks.

Public health proponents said the castigatio­n of big soda is long overdue. And some states are starting to act.

Southern Oaxaca state approved a ban this month on the sale of sodas and sugary snack foods to children. Tabasco state approved a similar measure this month, and federal lawmakers raised the possibilit­y of a national ban on junk food sales to kids, citing COVID-19 complicati­ons.

Oversized labels are set to appear on products containing high amounts of sugar, salt, calories or saturated fats, starting in October.

“I’m aware as a consumer that this causes damage. But it’s something that I like.” David González Flores, constructi­on worker

“There was already a pandemic, and we were calling attention to it and saying people are dying,” said Alejandro Calvillo, director of El Poder del Consumidor, a consumer organizati­on and longtime critic of Mexico’s beverage industry.

The soda habit starts young in Mexico. A survey by El Poder del Consumidor from Guerrero state found 70% of children consumed soda for breakfast; another 70% of children reported drinking sodas at least three times the previous day.

“What really strikes me is seeing people at 7 a.m. already poisoning themselves by drinking Coca-Cola,” said Pedro Arriaga, a Jesuit priest in rural Chiapas.

Beverage companies are among Mexico’s biggest advertiser­s and political lobbies.

Mexico introduced a tax on sugary drinks and high-calorie snacks in 2014 as part of a fiscal package. The 1-peso-per-liter tax (roughly 5 cents) diminished soda consumptio­n by 6% in 2015 and 7.5% in 2016, according to Juan Rivera Dommarco, general director of Mexico’s National Public Health Institute.

The money raised by the tax hasn’t gone toward public health as promised or paid for installing fountains in dilapidate­d schoolhous­es, which often lack running water, according to Calvillo.

In Mexico City’s southern Xochimilco borough, stricken with COVID-19 cases, locals purchasing sodas spoke of risks – and the difficulty of kicking the habit.

“It’s like an addiction. Even though we know it does damage, we keep on consuming it,” Víctor Martínez Alvarado, a government employee, said after buying a 3-liter bottle of sugar-free Coca-Cola. “They say sugar-free doesn’t do damage, but I think it’s the same. It does the same damage.”

“I’m aware as a consumer that this causes damage,” David González Flores, a constructi­on worker, said between sips of Coca-Cola. “But it’s something that I like.”

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Small merchants depend on soda for 25% of their sales, according to a trade alliance in Mexico.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Small merchants depend on soda for 25% of their sales, according to a trade alliance in Mexico.
 ??  ?? López-Gatell
López-Gatell

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