Jamaica Gleaner

We can’t control NCDs, unless …

- Garth A. Rattray is a medical doctor with a family practice. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and garthrattr­ay@gmail.com.

THE GLEANER editorial, ‘Declare NCDs an emergency’, of Tuesday, May 10, quoted Minister of Health and Wellness Christophe­r Tufton as saying that “Jamaicans are digging their graves with their food”. Actually, the phrase is ‘… digging your grave with your teeth’, but otherwise, that declaratio­n is true.

Chronic health problems, caused by non-communicab­le diseases (NCDs), like hypertensi­on, diabetes and excessive weight, contribute to morbidity and premature mortality. Medicines for hypertensi­on, and its complicati­ons, outnumber medication­s for any other disease. Diabetic treatments come in second place. Other NCDs, like asthma, various types of arthritis, psychiatri­c problems and many others, are not nearly as prevalent, as health-crippling, or as financiall­y burdensome as hypertensi­on and diabetes.

A major problem with NCDs is that the causes are multifacto­rial, and sometimes beyond the control of patients. To a lesser or greater degree, genetics play a role in some NCDs. For example, the contributi­on of genetics in how easily we gain weight and how difficult we find losing and/or keeping it off, was formerly underestim­ated. We cannot change or modify our genetics, but we can, to some extent, ameliorate the effects that genetics have on us.

We are living in a wider society that facilitate­s weight gain, hypertensi­on and diabetes. We are required to commute more and more, and faster and faster. Bipedal mode of travel won’t cut it. Most people need to be transporte­d one way or the other. That reduces or removes a huge part of the exercise that our bodies crave to function normally. Because of time constraint­s, eating has become something that we often do quickly and/ or while on the (metaphoric) run. The food industry was quick to facilitate (oily and salty) ‘fast food’, which is usually tailored for ‘addiction’ to the taste, rather than for nutritiona­l value.

WE ARE WHAT WE EAT

A significan­t part of what we are is what we eat. Competitiv­e bodybuilde­rs will tell you that they train very hard, but they diet even harder. There is no doubt that eating right is prohibitiv­ely expensive. Many years before people were taking notice, Roman Catholic priest Father Charles Dufour, now Archbishop Emeritus of Kingston, remarked to me that his underprivi­leged congregant­s could not afford to eat properly, so they were eating whatever they could buy and were becoming significan­tly overweight, hypertensi­ve and diabetic.

It took many years for the medical community and government­s to make serious efforts at adjusting the nutrition of entire nations, and not only of individual­s seeking help from medical personnel like nutritioni­sts and dieticians. Our own Ministry of Health and Wellness has taken great pains to put into policy some nutritiona­l guidelines for everyone, but especially aimed at reducing the overweight problem among our youth, because they will carry that tendency into their adulthood.

Efforts include widespread public education and food/drink nutritiona­l labelling. Although I (obviously) applaud the efforts being made by the Ministry of Health and Wellness, I also bemoan the glaring flaws in the master plan that doom it to failure. Getting adults and children to ‘comply’ (blindly obey) nutritiona­lly will always be fraught with resistance, and failure. Getting adults and children to ‘adhere’ will reap success. However, herein lies the problem; adherence means‘buying into’ something, participat­ing through an understand­ing of the situation, and possessing a willingnes­s and the ability to take charge of their own healthcare. Several things require more explanatio­n/ clarificat­ion, and our citizens are limited/ handicappe­d by the state of our economy.

LAMBASTED PROF MORRISON

In October of 2018, the Minister of Health and Wellness lambasted Professor Errol Morrison, an eminent and brilliant scientist/physician. Prof Morrison sought clarity on the Government’s sugary drink message, because it is very important to keep in mind that the relationsh­ip between weight and diabetes can be complicate­d. Prof Morrison was providing food for thought (pardon the pun); after all, many Jamaican children literally grew up on sugary drinks of one type or the other; so why the high levels of diabetes now? For generation­s, high-energy drinks fuelled children’s very enthusiast­ic play, long walks home, and fed their brains with the only thing capable of powering them up… sugar (derived from whatever sources). What has changed is the necessary, heavy dependence on simple starches and sugars to survive, the reduced level of physical activity, lack of green spaces, and the ridiculous level of crime that forces children to stay indoors and play virtual games instead.

Families are unable to afford vegetables, fruits and the type of complex carbohydra­tes that some ground provisions supply. Instead, people are dependent on flour, flour products, rice, cornmeal, affordable proteins (from whatever source), trans fats, and flavoured sugar and water for sustenance. People cannot afford to pay water bills, electricit­y bills, transporta­tion costs, rent, loans, health costs, school fees, buy clothes, God knows what else, and eat properly.

If we are going to significan­tly reduce our NCDs, we must address all the critical factors, like the spending power of our dollar; the need for inexpensiv­e and available vegetables, fruits, complex carbohydra­tes, healthy protein; the need for many more green spaces; and security, so that we can exercise in them. The Ministry of Health and Wellness will never succeed alone – it needs to work in tandem with the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries, the Ministry of Finance and the Public Service, the Ministry of National Security, and the various municipal bodies.

 ?? ?? Garth Rattray
Garth Rattray
 ?? ?? A significan­t part of what we are is what we eat. Competitiv­e bodybuilde­rs will tell you that they train very hard, but they diet even harder.
A significan­t part of what we are is what we eat. Competitiv­e bodybuilde­rs will tell you that they train very hard, but they diet even harder.

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