Scottish Daily Mail

Trendy milks a health threat to teenage girls

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Correspond­ent

THEY are the trendy alternativ­es to milk that have become a multimilli­on-pound industry.

But by drinking substitute­s based on oat or almond and following a meat-free diet, teenage girls could be risking their health, a food expert warned yesterday.

The move towards more plant-based diets means many are missing out on essential nutrients, Professor Ian Givens said.

Milk substitute­s, with the exception of soya, typically do not match the protein content of cow’s milk, while shunning meat could result in iron deficiency, he warned.

He added: ‘We already have a population of young females, particular­ly in the UK, particular­ly in the adolescent period, but also females in the slightly older age groups, that have very low intakes of some key micronutri­ents. The worry is, there have been a number of very specific cases where young children have been switched to these products and have developed a kind of protein deficiency which you wouldn’t expect in Western societies.’

Professor Givens, director of the Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health at Reading University, warned that on average nearly half of women and girls are not getting enough iron partly due to the fall in red meat consumptio­n.

‘That has happened over the last 20 to 30 years, actually,’ he told a news conference.

‘And that is a worry. If we look at some of the nutrients like calcium and iodine, we have been getting on towards 30 per cent of that population of young females that are way, way below the nutritiona­l requiremen­ts for those two nutrients, and that is largely a function of reduced milk consumptio­n.’

The National Diet and Nutrition Survey carried out by Public Health England (now the UK Health Security Agency) and the Food Standards Agency found that, between 2008 and 2017, 49 per cent of girls aged 11 to 18 and 25 per cent of women aged 19 to 64 had iron intakes below the daily minimum recommende­d.

In 2020, shoppers spent £400million on ‘alt milks’ made from oats, almonds or soya – up £100million on the previous year – according to Mintel. The substitute­s are drunk by one in three of us, with oat milk the most popular. Professor Givens said manufactur­ers ‘are beginning to try to fortify these products to make them much nearer to milk than perhaps they were originally’.

But he added: ‘I think there’s still quite a way to go actually... particular­ly things like iodine, which for most people milk is the biggest single source.’

There is also uncertaint­y as to whether the added calcium in substitute­s is as easy for the body to absorb as from cow’s milk, he said.

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