WHO slams 4 major industries for killing 2.7M per year in Europe
World Health Organization calls out tobacco, ultra-processed foods, fossil fuel, and alcohol industries for blocking public policies that could impact their profits.
The WHO has blamed four major industries — tobacco, ultra-processed foods [UPFs], fossil fuel and alcohol — for 2.7 million deaths a year in Europe, accusing them of obstructing public policies that could hurt their profits.
These "four industries kill at least 7,000 people in our region every day," Hans Kluge, the director of the World Health Organization Europe region, which counts 53 countries including Central Asia, said in a statement on Tuesday.
The consolidation of these industry sectors into a small number of multinationals "has enabled them to wield significant power over the political and legal contexts in which they operate, and to obstruct public interest regulations which could impact their profit margins," the WHO said as it released a report.
Industry tactics included exploiting vulnerable people through targeted marketing strategies, misleading consumers, and making false claims about the benefits of their products or their environmental credentials, it argued.
"These tactics threaten public health gains of the past century and prevent countries from reaching their health targets," it added.
Industry lobbying was hampering efforts to tackle non-communicable illnesses such as cardiovascular disease, cancer and diabetes, said the WHO.
Fight back
Almost 60 percent of adults and a third of children in Europe are overweight or obese, according to the WHO.
The most recent data from 2017 showed that one death in five attributed to cardiovascular disease and cancer in Europe was the result of unhealthy eating habits.
The WHO urged countries to fight back by enforcing stronger regulations on the marketing of unhealthy products, monopolistic practices and lobbying.
"People must take precedence before profit, always," Kluge said.
The report, "Commercial Determinants of Noncommunicable Diseases in the WHO European Region," is available on the WHO website.