I proposed just 5 of the reasons why food is, and must be, a Global Health Issue.
Reason number one, we are what we eat.
Put simply, globally, locally and individually – we are what we eat.
Improvements in nutrition may have given us enormous health benefits
this last century, but food-related disease, including obesity, has now
become our greatest health challenge for the current century.

Diseases which are both caused and solved, in part, by food.
In Europe, the USA and Australia, obesity rates
range from the low teens to mid thirty percent, and obesity-related
disease is already crippling populations, health systems and national
budgets – concurrently under strain from the economic crisis.
Now this is not to suggest that it is simply a question of calories
in versus calories out, but the food we eat, can afford and have access
to – and how this is marketed, packaged and served – is a large dictator
of our health.
Reason number two: Poverty is not a protector from food-related disease, but a risk factor for it.

The commonly spouted theory that malnutrition resulting from overconsumption is a rich-person’s problem is a dangerous myth.
Risk factors such as obesity and poor diet – as well as diseases such
as diabetes, heart disease, lung diseases, cancers and mental illness –
are linked with poverty, not affluence. Diseases deeply linked with the
quality and quantity of our diets, these are all linked with social and
economic derivation.
Reason three: Dietary risks represent profound health opportunities.
The 2010 Global Burden of Disease Study
ranked the top causes of global disability and deaths. It is no
surprise to many of us, that diet-related diseases topped the charts.
But what can surprise some, is that diet itself was named the number one
risk factor for morbidity and mortality globally.
The good news though, is that this is a risk factor. This is a
disease modifier and amplifier, but if addressed, it is also a disease
minimiser and an opportunity for prevention. The quality and quantity of
our diets may be an enormous threat to current global health, but
inversely it can also become an enormous opportunity for creating a
healthier future – if managed appropriately.
The fourth reason: Big Food is a complex, heterogenous and prickly beast.
In 2013, top food companies have more power than some governments,
but are unelected and have very different incentives – we must
understand this.
The world’s biggest food company alone employs 330,000 people and has
an annual revenue of almost 100 billion US dollars – two-thirds the GDP of New Zealand and twice the GDP of Croatia. This company also produces 1 billion products each and every day.
In short, some of these companies have more economic power than some
national governments and probably more global political influence than
many national governments. Yet, the leaders of these companies are
unelected and their driving incentives are market-based and focused on
profit, not development, environmental sustainability, social justice or
health.

Do we work with them? Do we shut the door? Do we regulate or let them
regulate? Can they really be trusted to fund governments and elections?
These companies exert an enormous influence on population health and I
categorise their behaviours into three groups. The good, the bad and
the ugly.
The good companies – those which supply food staples, share the need
to create healthy populations and sustainable practices – must be
engaged and led by government, but in an independent, mature,
arms-length and transparent way.
The bad must be recognised, called out, improved and, when necessary, regulated.
The ugly are the most dangerous. We must recognise that selfish and
deliberate decisions by food multi-nationals have caused enormous public
health costs in the past decades. These Big Food corporations and their
practices must be controlled, even limited – this is essential for
global health.
The final reason, there is a growing disconnect between food, cooking and people.
Food is essential to global health, right down to the individual
level. As food systems become more processed, supply-chains become
longer, and our diets are characterised by a long list of chemicals
rather than ingredients – we are losing our personal connection to food.
Our understanding of how to choose it, cook it and consume it. And this
is occurring almost ubiquitously.
Understanding food and where it comes from, is an essential knowledge
nugget for a healthy society – and crucial for those working in health.
As the Journal of the American Medical Association
recently published, the old medical adage of “see one, do one, teach
one” must also become “see one, taste one, cook one, teach one”.
Engaging with the education and political sectors to ensure this is
understood, would be time and energy well spent for any global health
enthusiast or doctor. Food must become a more accepted part of the
clinical mandate.
Looking Forward.
To conclude, Food is an essential part of health and wellbeing –
chosen, prepared, cooked and consumed correctly, food is medicine – it
can and has been an enormous catalyst to gains in life expectancy and
quality of life to populations around the globe.

Food companies, governments, the medical community, the food supply,
what we eat, how we eat, food policies and what we subsidise, how much
we eat and what we waste will all dictate whether, in the next century,
food can once again be a catalyst of health – or continues as a risk to
it.
One thing is clear – food is, and must be, a Global Health Issue.
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