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WHO
Releases Independent Expert
Report on Diet and Chronic Disease
GENEVA/ROME -- A diet
low in energy-dense foods that are high in saturated fats and
sugars, and abundant in fruit and vegetables, together with an
active lifestyle are among the key measures to combat chronic
disease recommended in an independent Expert Report prepared for
two UN agencies.
The report, commissioned by the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), from a
team of global experts, aims to identify new recommendations for
governments on diet and exercise to tackle the ever increasing
number of people who die each year from chronic diseases. The
burden of chronic diseases which include cardiovascular diseases,
cancers, diabetes and obesity is rapidly increasing worldwide.
In 2001, chronic diseases contributed approximately 59% of the
56.5 million total reported deaths in the world and 46%of the
global burden of disease.
This Expert Report is highly significant because
it contains the best currently available scientific evidence on
the relationship of diet, nutrition and physical activity to chronic
diseases, based on the collective judgement of a group of experts
with a global perspective, said Dr Ricardo Uauy, Head of the
University of Chile's Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology,
and Professor of Public Health Nutrition at the London School
of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who chaired the Expert Group.
The Report includes advice on ways of changing
daily nutritional intake and increasing energy expenditure by:
- reducing energy-rich foods high in saturated
fat and sugar;
- cutting the amount of salt in the diet;
- increasing the amount of fresh fruit and
vegetables in the diet.
- undertaking moderate-intensity physical
activity for at least an hour a day.
The Report, based on the analysis of the best available
current evidence and the collective judgement of 30 experts, emphasizes
that energy consumed each day should match energy expenditure.
Evidence suggests that excessive consumption of
energy-rich foods can encourage weight gain, the report says and
calls for a limit in the consumption of saturated and trans fats,
sugars and salt in the diet, noting they are often found in snacks,
processed foods and drinks.
The quality of fats and oils in a diet, as well
as the amount of salt consumed, the report says, can also have
an influence on cardiovascular diseases such as strokes and heart
attacks.
The Expert Report is released as WHO prepares a
Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health following
a May 2002 World Health Assembly resolution from its Member States.
The Expert Report will be formally published in
April as a WHO/FAO technical report together with an evaluation
by the Organizations and outlines of actions to implement the
recommendations. The Report will be a critical science-based contribution
to the development of the Global Strategy, aimed at reducing the
growing burden of disease related to cardiovascular diseases,
several forms of cancer, diabetes, obesity, osteoporosis and dental
disease.
FAO supports WHO in developing its Global Strategy.
As a follow-up to the Report's findings, FAO will undertake
work on identifying information needs and monitoring diets, and
on assessing the implications of the Report's recommendations
for all aspects of the food chain as well as for agricultural
and trade policies.
The report will form the basis for national and
regional bodies to develop specific guidelines on diet and exercise
for their local communities.
The report provides goals for dietary components
and physical activity levels consistent with good health and the
prevention of the major nutrition related chronic diseases, coronary
heart disease and hypertension, cancer, diabetes, obesity, osteoporotic
fractures, and dental diseases, Uauy said.
Urbanization and the rise of chronic diseases
Many of the deaths attributed to chronic diseases are due to risk
factors that could easily be prevented such as:
- high blood pressure;
- high cholesterol levels;
- obesity;
- low levels of physical activity.
More and more people in the developing world are
suffering from chronic disease, a seismic shift from a few decades
ago when chronic disease was associated with the rich, developed
world. Increased urbanization as rural people abandon their
land and move towards the cities -- plays a large part in this
change, according to the report.
City-dwellers are more likely to consume energy-dense
diets high in saturated fat and in refined carbohydrates.
This sudden change in diet, combined with a sedentary lifestyle,
is having a drastic effect on the urban poor.
Not all fats or all carbohydrates are the same;
it pays to know the difference, said Dr Uauy, adding, People
should eat less high-calorie foods, especially foods high in saturated
fat and sugar, be physically active, prefer unsaturated for saturated
fat and use less salt; enjoy fruits, vegetables and legumes and
prefer foods of plant and marine origin..
A diet rich in fruit and vegetables containing
immune-system boosting micronutrients could also help the body's
natural defences against infectious diseases, Uauy said.
The Expert Report's specific recommendations
on diet include limiting fat to between 15 and 30 percent of total
daily energy intake and saturated fats to less than 10 percent
of this total.
Carbohydrates, the report suggests, should provide
the bulk of energy requirements between 55 and 75 percent
of daily intake and free sugars should remain beneath 10 percent.
Protein should make up a further 10-15 percent of calorie intake
and salt should be restricted to less than 5 grams a day. Intake
of fruit and vegetables should be plumped up to reach at least
400 grams a day.
The report underlines the fact that chronic diseases
are not only caused by overeating but also by eating an unbalanced
diet, citing the influence of high salt consumption on increasing
blood pressure and saturated fats contributing to high levels
of cholesterol.
Physical activity is a key factor in determining
the amount of energy used each day and is therefore fundamental
to energy balance and weight control. One hour per day of moderate-intensity
activity, such as walking, on most days of the week, is needed
to maintain a healthy body weight, especially for those people
who spend most of their time sitting down, according to the Expert
Report.
WHO and FAO hope the report's findings will provide
member states with solid evidence to prepare national health strategies.
The Expert Report urges national governments to aim for dietary
guidelines that are simple, realistic and food-based. Finland
and Japan, countries that have actively intervened in the diet
and nutritional behaviour of their populations, have witnessed
dramatic decreases in risk factors and plunging rates of chronic
disease, the Report says.
Recognising that chronic diseases are preventable,
addressing the issues and creating an environment which supports
health, the Report says, is the key to reducing rates of deaths
and disability from chronic diseases. The process should establish
working relationships between communities and governments, encourage
local initiatives affecting schools and the workplace and also
involve the food industry, the report says.
Reference
Source WHO
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