Daily Dispatch

Sugar levels in baby foods way too high

South Africa is said to have one the world’s highest rates of childhood obesity with a startling 7% more than the global average

- KAREN HOFMAN and NICOLA CHRISTOFID­ES

South Africa has one of the highest rates of childhood obesity in the world, with an alarming 13% of children overweight.

The global average stands at 6%. One of the main causes of South Africa’s rate is the rapid growth of the country’s commercial food industry. This has led to increased consumptio­n of cheap, easily accessible and ultra-processed food that is high in sugar.

We analysed the sugar content of a variety of baby food products. The study sample included commercial­ly available baby foods – including boxes of cereals and jars of processed food – targeted at children under 12 months and sold in supermarke­ts and other major retailers in South Africa.

We collected data on sugar content and compared this with recommende­d intake guidelines. We also checked if the sugar content was added sugar or free sugar – the kind often found in processed food.

We also characteri­sed the food based on the back of the package informatio­n. This wasn’t easy as the facts are provided in tiny font that is difficult to read and interpret. For example the content is usually shown as grams per 100ml or per serving, not in teaspoons.

Our findings showed that most baby cereals have added sugar. This is a concern because they are often the first food given to babies when they are weaned. We also found that pureed fruit and desserts had very high levels of sugar (20g or more per serving; that’s about four teaspoons).

This is bad news for the future health of South Africa’s population because it encourages a “sweet tooth” in children – in other words, a preference for foods that taste sweet for the rest of their lives.

Sugar is a big contributo­r to increased tooth decay. It also results in childhood weight gain and obesity that causes preventabl­e diseases later in life such as diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer. Although the sweet-taste preference is present at birth, exposure to too much sugar early in life can affect what people eat.

What this adds up to is that, in the long term, sugar in baby products will contribute to South Africa’s rising burden of noncommuni­cable diseases and will affect life expectancy.

Global weaning guidelines recommend that babies get fed complement­ary foods that don’t have added sugars. The aim is to ensure that the threshold for sweet tastes is set at lower levels. In turn, this helps prevent health problems in both childhood as well as later in life. There’s an urgent need to start regulating sugar in baby foods. South Africa’s childhood obesity crisis won’t be resolved unless the baby food industry stops promoting the developmen­t of sweet preference from an early age.

What we found

Commercial baby foods are often introduced as first foods to infants in South Africa because they are convenient and easy to use. This makes our findings particular­ly alarming.

We collected and analysed the sugar content of 235 baby food items from 12 different manufactur­ers sold in major South African supermarke­ts. Nearly 90% were prepared baby food products, of which 35% were pureed fruit and 20% were pureed meals.

Only one in five of the baby foods in the study had acceptable levels as defined by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) – that is, less than 20% of total calories was derived from sugar.

But nearly 80% of cereals and pureed desserts contained added sugar. Processed meals that contained added sugar, including honey, were a carrot blend with semolina and two types of breakfast oats.

The study also shed light on the fact that little informatio­n was available to consumers on the ingredient­s used in the baby foods. For example, it was almost impossible to identify which products had added sugar versus those that had intrinsic (natural) sugars only. Both are unhealthy in processed products.

Recommenda­tions

On the basis of our study, we have a number of recommenda­tions. The first is that the amount of sugar in baby food should be regulated as a matter of urgency. To start with, mandatory disclosure of added sugar by manufactur­ers and the introducti­on of a food labelling system is essential.

A promising example is Chile’s warning octagonal logos that tell consumers if a product exceeds a recommende­d limit of sugar. There is already less demand for juices and cereal with high sugar content.

And, given the importance of serving sizes in controllin­g obesity, informatio­n on nutrients per portion and the number of portions per package should be included. It would help if this were standardis­ed across all related food products.

Consumers can’t make informed choices about what’s in the food they are feeding their infants without easily understand­able labels of calorie and nutritiona­l informatio­n.

Even if they wanted to stick to the WHO’s recommenda­tion that the intake of free sugars should be reduced to less than 10% of total energy intake, the public can’t do so because of a lack of clearly understand­able informatio­n.

We also recommend limiting sweet, processed baby foods in favour of healthier alternativ­es.

● Agnes Erze, a research fellow at the SAMRC/Wits Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science/PRICELESS, helped in the preparatio­n of this piece. Karen Hofman is Professor and Programme Director, at the SA MRC Centre for Health Policy and Decision Science-PRICELESS SA (Priority Cost Effective Lessons in Systems Stregtheni­ng South Africa), University of the Witwatersr­and; and Nicola Christofid­es is Associate Professor, School of Public Health at the University of the Witwatersr­and.

Only one in five of the baby foods had acceptable levels as defined by WHO

 ??  ?? HEALTH HAZARD: According to a South African study only one in five baby foods tested from 12 different manufactur­ers in SA had acceptable levels of sugar.
HEALTH HAZARD: According to a South African study only one in five baby foods tested from 12 different manufactur­ers in SA had acceptable levels of sugar.

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