The Herald

There’s a reason why children 28 are getting fat and it’s nothing to do with calories

- Joanna Blythman

CHILDREN’S food in Scotland, and throughout the UK, is a disgrace. Our tender babes and tots eat the worst diet of any European nation. How long can we remain indifferen­t to the fact that we’re routinely serving them food-like industrial concoction­s that gravely undermine their health for life?

This peculiarly Anglo-american form of child abuse is widely tolerated because it is so commonplac­e.

In the UK, we seem strangely untroubled by the cynical factory horrors that lurk in the children’s food aisles, simply because they are so ubiquitous.

Every child eats this stuff here – at school, at a friend’s house, at the soft play centre, everywhere – so it must be okay. Safety in numbers, we think. The Government wouldn’t let these products be sold if they were really bad for us, would it?

We need a bazooka to shock us out of this complacenc­y, and a new study from researcher­s at Imperial College in London makes such alarming, yet utterly believable, reading that it ought to do just that.

They have followed 9000 children in the west of England who were born in the early 1990s, from the age of seven until the age of 24.

Using food diaries, researcher­s recorded what the children ate and drank at age seven, 10 and 13 and took regular measuremen­ts of how they were developing.

This is, to my knowledge, the biggest long-term study of children’s diet and health to date, the only one that focuses specifical­ly on the deadly role of feeding children ultra-processed food (UPF). The results only confirm my worst suspicions.

I’ll let Kiara Chang, Research Fellow and first author on the paper, break the bad news, but succinctly put, the higher the proportion of UPFS children consume, the greater their risk of becoming overweight or obese, and the more blighted their health prospects.

“During the 17 years of follow up, we saw a very consistent increase in all measures of unhealthy weight among children who consumed greater amounts of ultra-processed foods as part of their diet.

“Their BMI, weight gain, and body fat gain was much quicker than those children consuming less ultra-processed foods. We actually see it making a difference from as young as nine years old.”

It’s such a stark difference. By the age of nine, fortunate children who have been brought up mainly on traditiona­l, homecooked food, made from scratch, using minimally processed ingredient­s, will have a healthy, normal body weight.

Their less fortunate counterpar­ts, meanwhile, those raised on a diet frontloade­d with ultra-processed products, are already travelling on a sad conveyor belt to ill-health.

Ultra-processed food now accounts for more than 40 per cent of a typical child’s diet by weight, or more than 60% if you take calories as your measure.

The Imperial team has also uncovered a “dose-response relationsh­ip”. This means that it’s not only that children who eat the most ultra-processed foods have the worst weight gain, but also that the more they eat, the worse this response gets.

By 24 years of age, the highest consumers of UPF in the study weighed 3.7kg more and measured an extra 3.1cm round the waist.

This study is just more evidence of the devastatin­g effect of industrial food processing, that is, formulatio­ns of food substances often modified by chemical processes and then assembled into readyto-consume hyper-palatable food and drink products using flavours, colours, emulsifier­s and other cosmetic additives – on our children’s health.

The researcher­s argue that radical, effective public health actions are needed urgently to reduce children’s exposure to, and consumptio­n of, UPFS.

Amongst other things, they want national dietary guidelines updated to emphasise preference for fresh or minimally processed foods and avoidance of ultra-processed foods, in line with guidelines developed in Brazil, Uruguay, France, Belgium and Israel.

This demand ought to be a no-brainer, but it will meet a wall of resistance.

Supermarke­ts know that ultraproce­ssing adds value to commodity ingredient­s and therefore makes for bigger retail profits.

Our erstwhile public health establishm­ent should be free from commercial influence, and actively protecting our children.

But it has let them down really badly, by commission as well as omission.

The apparently august committees that frame food guidelines in the UK, and Scotland, are riddled with vested interests.

Even those members who aren’t blatantly representi­ng corporates with UPF portfolios are often recipients of research funds from such companies.

Amongst the less conflicted government advisers, too many follow an appeasemen­t principle. It is unrealisti­c, they argue, to wean the UK of its addiction to childhood junk. That ship has sailed.

Instead they politely request that the UPF barons “re-formulate” their products to create “healthier” versions.

That’s missing the point entirely.

They aid and abet the nation’s ill-health by propping up the pernicious notion that if only parents become savvy shoppers, they can cherry pick from the children’s food shelves something approachin­g a healthy diet.

We should see this strategy for the cowardly, or worse dishonest, nonsense that it is.

Government advisors are dumping responsibi­lity they should be shoulderin­g onto the shoulders of confused parents who have been actively hoodwinked and waylaid at every turn by misleading marketing claims.

What a failure there has been in conveying useful, effective eating advice to the public from the dietetic community.

They bamboozle the public with a plethora of familiar messages: count calories; reduce fat; fill your plate with starchy foods. All of these are wrong and best ignored.

And they’ve been trotting out this bankrupt advice for decades just as the real world evidence belies it.

One clear and simple four-word phrase encapsulat­es what parents need to know: avoid ultra-processed food.

If you need it in one word: Cook. Prepare fresh home cooked food for your children, as we used to do traditiona­lly.

But our pathetic government food advisers can’t bring themselves to say them.

Why? To do so would be an admission that they’ve been mis-advising us all for decades.

We are told to count calories; reduce fat; fill our plates with starchy foods. These messages are wrong and best ignored

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 ??  ?? Ultra processed foods can lead to a lifetime of obesity, a study found
Ultra processed foods can lead to a lifetime of obesity, a study found

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