Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

A customer buys meat at a market in Beijing in June 2020

Top stories

Diet-related illness increases with availability of red meat: study

Paris (AFP), Nov 19 – As global trade in red and processed meats has increased, so have chronic diseases associated with meat consumption, a study looking at data from 154 countries found on Thursday.

Researchers focused on illness and death rates from three diseases strongly linked to red and processed meat consumption: colorectal cancer, type-2 diabetes and coronary heart disease.

They drew on meat import and export figures from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to find out where in the world red and processed meats had become more available.

They then checked these findings against health data from the Global Burden of Disease project.

“The increased intake of red and processed meat products via trade caused the abrupt increase of diet-related non-communicable diseases,” the study published in the British Medical Journal concluded.

The adverse effects of a diet high in red and processed meats is well known.

But the international trade of these products also has far-reaching impacts on the climate, through greenhouse gas emissions, and biodiversity loss, through shrinking habitat, the study noted.

“Few international initiatives and national guidelines for sustainable diets explicitly address the spillover impacts of the meat trade across countries,” they said.

They calculated a worldwide increase in related deaths of nearly 75 percent between 1993 and 2018, with major variations by geographical region.

While they estimated a 55 percent rise in related deaths in developed countries, the rate of increase in developing countries was more than double: 157 percent.

“These higher rates are because many developing countries around the world exponentially relied on red and processed meat imports to meet their increased meat demands under rapid urbanisation and income growth,” the study says.

Over the years covered by the study, developing countries expanded imports while rich ones expanded exports, the findings showed.

The study suggests that to achieve healthier and more sustainable diets, international dialogue should involve both health and trade bodies, citing the World Trade Organization (WTO).

“Regional trade agreements of the WTO accelerate red and processed meat flows among countries,” it said, and suggested it could coordinate with UN health and food agencies to improve future trade policy.

Since it is observational, the study can suggest but not confirm the cause-effect relationship between meat trade and diet-related illnesses.

More on Capital News

Capital Health

Vihiga Teaching and Referral Hospital has received new dialysis machines and medical consumables from NEUSOFT Company to improve renal care services, reduce patient waiting...

Capital Health

WHO has released updated guidance on hantavirus, a rodent-borne disease that can cause severe respiratory and kidney complications, with fatality rates reaching up to...

Capital Health

MoH inaugurates a new KMPDC board led by Namenya Were as Health CS Aden Duale pushes reforms to strengthen regulation, patient safety, and workforce...

NATIONAL NEWS

2026 Supplementary Budget allocates Sh2.9bn to IEBC for pending bills and Sh17.6bn to KRA to boost tax collections, while also funding security, education, health,...

Capital Health

Kenyans spend up to seven hours a day online—among the world’s highest. Experts warn prolonged screen time is driving eye strain, myopia, and sleep...

Capital Health

Among the grievances cited is the alleged withholding of statutory and third-party deductions, including Afya SACCO remittances, for at least five months.

Capital Health

Health CS Aden Duale and Chinese Ambassador Guo Haiyan reviewed progress on China-funded hospital projects in Kenya, including Londiani and Baringo referral facilities.

NATIONAL NEWS

Omtatah emphasized that his petition does not call for the suspension of funding or the withdrawal of life-saving medicines.