City
Epaper

Need stronger policies to protect kids from harms of food marketing: WHO

By IANS | Updated: July 3, 2023 19:05 IST

Geneva, July 3 The World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday released new guidelines calling for stronger policies to ...

Open in App

Geneva, July 3 The World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday released new guidelines calling for stronger policies to protect children from the harmful impact of food marketing.

The UN health body said that children continue to be exposed to food marketing, which predominantly promotes foods high in saturated fatty acids, trans-fatty acids, free sugars and/or sodium and uses a wide variety of marketing strategies that are likely to appeal to children.

Food marketing has a harmful impact on children’s food choice and their dietary intake, affects their purchase requests to adults for marketed foods and influences the development of their norms about food consumption.

The new guideline recommends countries to implement comprehensive mandatory policies to protect children of all ages from the marketing of foods and non-alcoholic beverages that are high in saturated fatty acids, trans-fatty acids, free sugars and/or salt (HFSS).

“Food marketing remains a threat to public health and continues to negatively affect children’s food choices, intended choices and their dietary intake,” the WHO said in a statement.

The global health agency said that restricting the power of food marketing to persuade, which involves limiting the use of cartoons or techniques that appeal to children, such as including toys with products, advertising with songs, and celebrity endorsements, is also impactful.

“Aggressive and pervasive marketing of foods and beverages high in fats, sugars and salt to children is responsible for unhealthy dietary choices,” said Dr Francesco Branca, Director of the Department of Nutrition and Food Safety of WHO, in the statement.

“Calls to responsible marketing practices have not had a meaningful impact. Governments should establish strong and comprehensive regulations,” Branca added.

–IANS

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: unKim Jong UnUn Framework Convention On Climate ChangeUn CharterUn Under Secretary GeneralUn Economic And Social CouncilThe World Health OrganizationUn General AssemblyUn Refugee AgencyUn Peace Keeping Missions
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai’s Efforts Lead to UN’s Permanent Consumer Protection Mechanism in Geneva

International"World Cannot Afford Another Conflict": UN Urges Restraint as India-Pakistan Tensions Rise

InternationalNorth Korea Demonstrates Advanced Military Capability With Test-Firing of Guided Rocket Launcher

InternationalIndia at UN Calls for Immediate Ceasefire in Gaza Strip, Urges for Unconditional Release of Hostages

InternationalRussian President Vladimir Putin Arrives in North Korea on Two-Day State Visit

International Realted Stories

InternationalOperation Baam marks major expansion of Baloch armed resistance, says activist

International"It was a test of India's indigenous systems vs Chinese systems...": Warfare expert Spencer on Pakistan's escalation during Op Sindoor

InternationalPakistan: Systemic failures, delayed response led to Swat River tragedy, says probe

InternationalThousands of Afghans face deportation as US court rejects delay in ending TPS protections

InternationalIndia sent a message with Op Sindoor, change in its strategic doctrine will change entire region: Warfare expert John Spencer