Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

A national nutrition strategy for UK

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/news.asp?id=7770

 

A national nutrition strategy for UK

 

 

 

 

 

19/09/03 - The UK needs a national nutrition strategy to tackle the long-term

causes of some of its most costly chronic diseases, argues a scientist in a

leading British journal Science and Public Affairs.

 

The annual estimated cost to the country’s National Health Service (NHS) of

diet-related diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, cancers, diabetes and

osteoporosis, is in excess of £15 billion, writes Professor Sue

Fairweather-Tait, head of the nutrition division at the Institute of Food

Research in Norwich, but the country invests a tiny percentage in preventative

strategies.

 

Costs are escalating because of the ageing population and the current obesity

epidemic, all of which have ultimately to be met by taxpayers. But while Wales

and Scotland are developing nutrition strategies to deal with their regional

health issues, there is no equivalent activity for England, where most of the UK

population lives, and Northern Ireland.

The multidisciplinary nature of nutrition (spanning molecular to social

sciences) makes it relevant to several agencies and Government departments,

including the Food Standards Agency, Department of Health, DEFRA, MRC and BBSRC,

but there is no primary ownership, and no one appointed to harness all the

national resources to develop a nutrition strategy to improve public health in

the UK, argues Fairweather-Tait.

“The government is taking the long view to tackle environmental issues. We are

not told to put on a gas mask because the air is polluted – action is taken to

clean it up. The root causes of obesity and diet-related diseases need to be

tackled with a similarly long term approach,” writes the scientist.

And on the controversial subject of the food industry’s role, government is held

ultimately responsible for public health. “The food industry and pharmaceutical

companies cannot be expected to take the lead, but meanwhile the taxpayer is

losing out. We cannot afford the predicted health care costs – immediate action

is needed (for example to subsidise healthy foods, which are often beyond the

budget of low-income families) to ensure long term economic and human health in

the UK.”

However, the author suggests, like other consumer campaign groups, such as the

International Task Force on Obesity, that the government might have to consider

introducing legislation or incentives to encourage the food industry to be more

proactive in their product development, marketing and pricing strategies, to

help consumers select healthier diets.

The British could also miss out on opportunities arising from the new

developments in nutritional science, including new tools for preventive health,

because of the lack of a unifying champion for nutrition, notes Professor

Fairweather-Tait.

She points to emerging nutrigenomics research, likely to lead to individual

dietary advice and bespoke food products to optimise the quality and longevity

of people’s lives, but hampered by significant barriers to progress.

“The science itself is complex and substantial resources are needed to move our

understanding of nutrition a quantum leap forward,” writes Fairweather-Tait.

As yet, no research council or government department has made moves to take

primary ownership of nutrition research in the UK. A national nutrition strategy

in conjunction with regional nutrition initiatives would harness and direct

existing efforts, generate a co-ordinated research programme and ensure national

funding is optimally deployed, believes the scientist.

The ‘fat tax’, proposed by some medical professionals, however is not an option,

and merely represents a ‘search for short-term solutions’, according to the

article. Part of the solution should be collaboration, not competition, between

key UK research groups, perhaps through targeted funding initiatives, to build a

national research programme, suggests the author.

And a national nutrition strategy must be more than a ‘talking shop’ (e.g. the

FSA Diet and Nutrition Forum) for all interested parties and stakeholders. It

must have clear objectives and accountability, strong leadership, and an

appropriate level of resource, as highlighted by the recent FAO/WHO report on

diet, nutrition and the prevention of chronic diseases (2003).

“The knowledge gained from appropriately directed and coordinated nutrition

research and its application will help individuals achieve maximum potential to

live a long and healthy life. But it must be accompanied by widespread changes

in attitudes and practice in academic, political, industrial and consumer

sectors of the UK. Government policy to initiate and facilitate a national

strategy for nutrition is long overdue,” concludes Professor Fairweather-Tait.

Professor Susan Fairweather-Tait’s article is published in the latest edition of

Science and Public Affairs, published by the British Association for the

Advancement of Science.

 

 

 

 

NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE.

Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info

http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info

 

 

 

The New with improved product search

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...