BARBADOS-HEALTH-Barbados to implement policies to remove fatty acids from local foods

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BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – The Barbados government says policies to remove industrially produced trans fatty acids from local foods should be in place by December next year.

Health and Wellness Minister Dr. Jerome Walcott, addressing the Small Island Developing States (SIDS) High-Level Technical Meeting on NCDs and Mental Health, said the move to crack down on trans fats is among efforts such as food labeling, taxes on unhealthy foods, and campaigns to limit the amount of sugar in drinks to combat non-communicable diseases (NCDs), in the face of commercial determinants.

“Commercial determinants of health and trade are also important drivers of NCDs in SIDS. (They are) defined as the private sector activities that affect people’s health positively or negatively. Underpinning the commercial determinants of health is an understanding that large, multinational companies can exercise broad influence on the economic, physical, social, and cultural environments in which people live,” Walcott said.

“In fact, through their influence on food prices, availability, advertising, trade agreements, and policies, they have accelerated the nutritional shift away from traditional diets, resulting in increased obesity, food insecurity, and NCDs. Sometimes, due to the size and nature of the commercial actors involved, governments in SIDS face impossible odds in securing regulatory protection to improve health.

“This is particularly true where government resources and budgets may be dwarfed by the size and scale of multinational companies, state-owned enterprises, and foreign commercial actors,” the Health and wellness Minister said, adding that these entities were also associated with climate change and more significant social and economic burdens on “already underfunded and fragile health systems.

“With health, it is imperative to examine the role of commercial actors. Understanding these commercial determinants of health, the power balances inherent within them, and the critical role of global governance is an important step in supporting SIDS to improve health outcomes.”

Walcott told the delegates that small island developing states shared a disproportionately high burden of the risk factors, morbidity, and premature mortality caused by non-communicable diseases, mental health conditions, and their determinants.

He said 52 percent of people aged 30 to 69 with NCDs in SIDS countries are dying prematurely, with risk factors showing that 28 percent of adults aged 18 and above do not engage in enough physical activity.

Additionally, 23 percent smoke tobacco, while 56 percent are overweight, with half being obese. In addition, the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2019 estimates that 15.2 percent of the Caribbean population has a mental disorder needing intervention.

Furthermore, in SIDS, suicide rates were disproportionately high compared to global averages, he stated, noting that childhood obesity rates remained on the increase, particularly in the western Pacific region.

“To combat these issues, it is clear that multi-sectoral and whole-of-government approaches are required, especially for action on the environmental, economic, and social determinants of health.

“This SIDS meeting now provides the opportunity for technical and scientific staff to deliberate and make recommendations to the ministerial meeting to be held here in Barbados in June and, ultimately, to have the outputs of these two meetings feed the international agenda for NCDs,” Walcott told the meeting that is being hosted by the Ministry of Health and Wellness, the World Health Organization and the Pan American Health Organization.

It ends on Wednesday.

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