420,000 die from
tainted food annually, a third of them young children: WHO AFP
Some 600 million people get sick from eating contaminated food each year, and
around 420,000 die, the World Health Organization said Thursday, adding that
young children account for nearly one third of those deaths.
In its first-ever estimate of the impact of
foodborne diseases, the UN health agency found that almost one in 10 people
globally get sick each year from food contaminated with a range of bacteria,
viruses, parasites, toxins and chemicals.
Kazuaki Miyagishima, head of WHO's food safety
division, stressed the importance of getting clear data on the problem.
"Until now, we have been combating an
invisible enemy, an invisible ghost," he told reporters in Geneva, adding
that he hoped that quantifying the toll of contaminated food would help
mobilize countries to significantly boost food safety.
The report, which is based on analysis of data up
to 2010, identified 31 different agents contaminating food and making hundreds
of millions of people either acutely ill or injecting them with serious
illnesses like cancer that may not surface until years later.
In addition to killing nearly half a million
people each year, foodborne diseases are taking a significant toll on the
quality of life of those who survive, the report said.
Each year, the global population as a whole loses
a full 33 million so-called Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs), or healthy
years of life, it said.
'Very conservative' numbers
Miyagishima said the numbers were "very
conservative," representing the "minimum damage caused to humanity by
contaminated foods."
Since foodborne pathogens take advantage of weak
immune systems, young children are particularly at risk.
Children under the age of five make up only nine
percent of the global population but account for nearly 40 percent of all
illnesses linked to eating unsafe food and 30 percent -- 125,000 -- of all
related deaths, the report said.
Foodborne diseases can cause short-term, albeit
violent, symptoms like vomiting and diarrhoea, usually referred to as food
poisoning, but can also cause long-term illnesses like cancer, kidney or liver
failure, brain and neural disorders, it said.
Diarrhoeal diseases, often caused by eating raw or
undercooked meat, eggs and dairy products contaminated with salmonella, E.coli
or campylobacter bacteria, or the norovirus stomach bug, are by far responsible
for most foodborne diseases.
Some 550 million people fall sick with food-related
diarrhoea diseases each year, and 230,000 of them die, including 96,000
children under the age of five, the report showed.
It also listed parasites like the Taenia Solium
tapeworm and aflatoxin, which is produced by mould on grain that is stored inappropriately
and which has been linked to cancer in the liver and kidneys, among the major
culprits.
While some diseases, like those caused by
salmonella, can wreak havoc worldwide, many food contaminants are far more
common in poorer countries, where people are more likely to prepare food with
unsafe water, and where food production and storage is more likely to be
inadequate.
Lower levels of literacy and education, as well as
lax or poorly implemented food safety laws compound the problem.
Africa and Southeast Asia are the hardest-hit
regions, together accounting for 312,000 deaths related to contaminated food
each year, compared to just 5,000 deaths in Europe and 9,000 deaths in the
Americas, where food safety laws are stronger.
Arie Hendrik Havelaar, who heads WHO's foodborne
disease burden epidemiology reference group, said the jarring differences
showed countries could choose to make the food we eat safer.
"A large part of these foodborne diseases are
preventable," he told reporters.
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