Hidden Hunger and the Transformation of Food Systems. Группа авторовЧитать онлайн книгу.
foods in diets has been identified as a driver of excess energy intake [19].
Overweight and obesity have reached epidemic levels in many countries [20, 21] and continue to increase in all regions, particularly among school-age children. In 2018, an estimated 40 million children aged under 5 years were overweight [22]. In 2016, 131 million children aged 5–9 years, 207 million adolescents, and 2 billion adults were overweight. About a third of overweight adolescents and adults and 44% of overweight children aged 5–9 years were obese [1].
According to the WHO, over the period from 2011 to 2025, the cumulative economic losses due to NCDs under a “business as usual” scenario in low- and middle-income countries could reach USD 7 trillion, as compared to an annual expenditure of USD 11.2 billion to implement a set of high-impact interventions [15].
5. Food Insecurity
People get sick because they cannot access adequate, acceptable food at all times. Health impacts of food systems also occur through insufficient or precarious access to food that is culturally acceptable and nutritious.
The most recent updates on food security and nutrition indicate that more than 820 million people in the world are still hungry today and the absolute number of undernourished people slowly continues to increase. Around 2 billion people do not have regular access to safe, nutritious, and sufficient food, i.e., they experience moderate or severe food insecurity [1]. The lack of regular access to nutritious and sufficient food, alongside inadequate access to health, water, hygiene, sanitation, and care services, puts people at greater risk of malnutrition and poor health. It is estimated that 149 million children under the age of 5 years are still stunted and the pace of progress is too slow to meet the 2030 target of halving the number of stunted children. Hidden hunger also prevails in children and adults. Current estimates show that 264 million women of reproductive age are affected by iron deficiency anemia, partly due to the inadequacy of diets [23].
Why the Heath Impacts Are Systematically Reproduced
The health impacts of food systems have been comprehensively researched and documented. Given the breadth and severity of the impacts described above, an urgent case for reforming food and farming systems can be made on the grounds of protecting human health. Furthermore, many of these impacts are closely linked to industrial food and farming systems, i.e., systems based on deriving productivity gains from specialization, intensification, and concentration of production and distribution. The resulting practices – chemical-intensive agriculture, intensive livestock production, the mass production and mass marketing of ultra-processed foods, and the development of long and deregulated global commodity supply chains – drive negative health impacts across the spectrum.
Why, then, has concrete action not been systematically pursued to address the root causes of unhealthy food systems? Firstly, while the evidence is clear and compelling, food systems remain complex. For example, chronic exposure to EDCs is particularly hard to trace to specific sources or even to specific chemicals, while zoonotic pathogens and antimicrobial resistance can spread through multiple pathways within and around food systems. Furthermore, many of the health impacts described above are compounded by factors like climate change, poverty, and unsanitary conditions, which are reinforced by industrial food and farming practices. This complexity is real and challenging, but should not be an excuse for inaction.
Secondly, the low power and visibility of those whose health is most affected by food systems leaves major blind spots in the evidence base. Precarious working conditions on farms, fishing vessels, and food production lines means that those exposed to the greatest health risks are not seen or heard. In particular, the insecure status of hired and migrant laborers undermines the reporting of abuses and injuries. Risks to farmers and farmworkers in developing countries are particularly under-documented. The biggest health risks tend to accrue to vulnerable groups, particularly hired and migrant laborers, who are less likely to report injuries and illnesses for fear of termination, or lack of knowledge of their right to medical services. In turn, employers may have a financial incentive to under-report injuries and illnesses that occur on their premises in order to lower their workers’ compensation insurance payments.
These blind spots make it less likely for problems to be prioritized politically, allowing health risks to continue to afflict marginalized populations. This is compounded by a broader disconnection of the general public from the process of food production. Reconnecting people with the realities of the food they eat – and bringing the true cost of our food systems to light – is therefore essential to unlock the food-health nexus.
Thirdly, the root causes of health impacts are obscured by the disproportionate power of dominant actors to set the terms of debate. Powerful actors – multinational agribusinesses, governments, donors – have the power to establish the narratives that frame the problems and the solutions. These “solutions,” from biofortification to climate-smart agriculture, are premised on further industrialization of food systems, and ignore the role of current systems in driving health risks (e.g., by perpetuating poverty and climate change). This means reinventing the problem as the solution. Meanwhile, those most affected by the health impacts in food systems (e.g., small-scale farmers in the Global South) become increasingly marginal in diagnosing the problems and identifying the solutions.
Power – to achieve visibility, to frame narratives, to set the terms of debate, and to exploit complexity as an excuse for inaction – is therefore at the heart of the food-health nexus. The concentration of power in the hands of a relatively small number of players is a key factor keeping industrial food systems in place, despite their spiraling impacts on human and planetary health. It combines with other “lock-ins” – path dependency, export orientation, and the use of narrow productivist narratives and measures of success – to hold back the paradigm shift that is urgently required [24].
Leverage Points to Contribute to Transformation to Healthier Food Systems
IPES-Food identified five leverage points for moving towards a new basis of understanding and action to build healthier food systems. First is the continued need to promote food systems thinking at all levels – connections between different health impacts, between human health and ecosystem health, between food, health, poverty, and climate change, and between social and environmental sustainability. Health risks must be viewed in their entirety, across the food system and on a global scale. We note that food systems thinking is gaining traction. Since publication of the IPES-Food report on the Food-Health nexus in 2017, several reviews and publications have been undertaken emphasizing a food systems approach and broadening discussion to socioeconomic conditions and planetary health [10, 25, 26].
Second is the need to reassert scientific integrity and research as a public good. Research priorities, structures, and capacities need to be fundamentally realigned with principles of public interest and public good, and the nature of the challenges we face (i.e., cross-cutting sustainability challenges and systemic risks). Specific measures are needed to counter the influence of vested interests in shaping scientific knowledge on the health impacts of food systems, and to reduce the reliance of researchers on private funding, for example new rules around conflicts of interest in scientific journals, initiatives to fund and mandate independent scientific research,