Unravelling the Food-Health Nexus to Build Healthier Food Systems

World Rev Nutr Diet. 2020:121:1-8. doi: 10.1159/000507497. Epub 2020 Oct 6.

Abstract

The urgent call to transform global food systems is well founded on the need to reduce the effects of food systems on human health, environment, peoples' rights, and creation of a just society. Unhealthy diets contribute significantly to the global disease burden and pose huge risks to morbidity and mortality. Efforts to transform diets are highly dependent on transformation of the food system. All countries are now affected by the various forms of malnutrition - undernutrition, overweight and obesity, micronutrient deficiencies - with progress often too slow and in some cases going into reverse. Concomitantly, the number of food insecure is increasing, and the prevalence of non-communicable disease is high. IPES-Food, in collaboration with the Global Alliance for the Future of Food, undertook a review of the scientific evidence covering a whole range of global health impacts associated with food systems. The review examined how food and farming systems affect human health, explored why the negative impacts are systematically reproduced and why we fail to prioritize them politically, and how we can build healthier food systems for all. Five categories of health impacts were examined: (i) occupational hazards; (ii) environmental contamination; (iii) contaminated, unsafe, and altered foods; (iv) unhealthy dietary patterns, and (v) food insecurity. The study confirmed that food systems affect health through multiple, interconnected pathways, generating severe human and economic costs. It also highlighted how prevailing power relations in the food system help to shape and sometimes obscure our understanding of the impacts. Five leverage points for building healthier food systems are recommended: (i) promotion of food systems thinking; (ii) reasserting scientific integrity and research as a public good; (iii) bringing the alternatives to light; (iv) adopting the precautionary principle, and (v) building integrated food policies under participatory governance.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture / methods*
  • Diet, Healthy / methods*
  • Food
  • Food Supply / methods*
  • Global Health*
  • Humans
  • Malnutrition / prevention & control*
  • Nutrition Policy*
  • Nutritional Status