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Experts red-flag ultra-processed food retail surge

Why in News?

  • Recent Lancet series (three-paper global study) highlights the sharp rise in ultra-processed food consumption in India and its health consequences.
  • Retail sales of ultra-processed foods rose from $0.9B in 2006 → ~$38B in 2019 (≈40-fold increase).
  • Obesity, diabetes, and other non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are surging concurrently.
  • Signals urgent need for policy action on diet, marketing, and public health.

Relevance:

  • GS 2: Health — obesity, diabetes, NCD burden, dietary transition, public health policy.
  • GS 3: Economy — rising healthcare expenditure, productivity loss due to lifestyle diseases.
  • GS 3: Science & Tech / Food Systems — food processing industry, aggressive marketing, supply-chain expansion.

Definition

  • Ultra-Processed Foods (UPFs): Foods industrially formulated from refined ingredients, preservatives, additives; high in calories, low in nutrients; examples: soft drinks, chips, chocolates, instant noodles.
  • Characteristics: Convenient, long shelf-life, hyper-palatable, aggressively marketed.
  • Health Concern: Associated with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, heart, kidney, GI disorders, depressive symptoms.

Current Scenario in India

  • Obesity: 28.6% adults affected (≈1 in 4).
  • Diabetes: 11.4% adults (≈1 in 10).
  • Prediabetes: 15.3% adults.
  • Abdominal obesity: 39.5% adults.
  • Childhood obesity: Increased from 2.1% (2016) → 3.4% (2019–21).
  • UPF market growth: $0.9B → $38B between 2006–2019; rapid penetration into Indian diets.

Why UPFs are Harmful ?

  • High-calorie, low-nutrient → excess energy intake.
  • Frequent consumption adds ≥500 extra calories/day → fat deposition, particularly visceral fat.
  • Visceral obesity increases metabolic risks: Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, hypertension.
  • Aggressive marketing normalizes unhealthy diets, replacing traditional meals.

Policy and Regulatory Gaps

  • India lacks precise data on UPF consumption patterns.
  • Current regulations insufficient to curb marketing, especially targeting children.
  • No uniform policy to manage food environment or labeling standards effectively.

Global & Scientific Context

  • Lancet series authored by 43 global experts: warns of worldwide trend of UPF consumption replacing traditional diets.
  • Echoes global concerns: NCD burden rising in low- and middle-income countries due to dietary transition.
  • Nutrition experts stress urgent intervention to prevent “nutrition transition” from traditional healthy diets to industrialized diets.

Implications for India

  • Rising healthcare burden from obesity and NCDs.
  • Early onset of metabolic diseases in children.
  • Genetic predisposition of Indians to visceral obesity intensifies risk.
  • Need for multi-pronged interventions: public awareness, marketing restrictions, fiscal policies (taxation/subsidies), school nutrition programs.

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