THE FAULT IN OUR LIFESTYLES
The increase in non-communicable diseases among the non-elderly around the world is doubly alarming for countries like Pakistan with a youthful demography. Most of the problems stem from unhealthy diets, sedentary lives and, as always, a lack of information
It all started three years ago when Zaid Sohail realised that if he did not change his dietary habits and lifestyle he would die.
Lunch at the office would be ordered from some nearby fast food joint on a daily basis. On most days, the meal would be incomplete without mouth-watering pastries from the nearby bakery chain. And teatime would always be the perfect pick-me-up with cake rusks or baqar khani dunked in doodh patti, to re-energise.
At 24 years, his life was a whirl of oversized beef burgers, large packs of fries on the side and pizzas, downed with generous portions of icy cold fizzy drinks. After work, he loved hanging with friends till late in the night. Post-midnight, it would be his time alone in his bedroom, enjoying a movie over a late-night meal — usually a kebab roll, fries and a can of cola.
A ticking time bomb, Sohail who was suffering from hypertension, had no idea that poor diet was found to be a leading cause of death (one among five), among young adults in 2017.
NCDs kill 41 million people each year. That's equivalent to 71 percent of all deaths globally.
This was affirmed by a study published earlier this year in The Lancet, a weekly medical journal. The study looked into the relationship between our eating habits and chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs) by studying dietary consumption between 1990 and 2017 in 195 countries. The focus of the study was 15 types of foods or nutrients — fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds, legumes, whole grains, fibre, calcium, milk, omega-3 fatty acids from seafood, polyunsaturated fats, trans fats, red meat, processed meat, sugary drinks and sodium.
The study highlighted the need for improving diet across nations by pointing out the potential impact of suboptimal diet on NCD mortality and morbidity.
Silently killing our youth
According to the World Health Organization, NCDs, including cardiovascular diseases (like heart attacks and strokes), cancers, respiratory diseases (including asthma) and diabetes — also known as lifestyle diseases — kill 41 million people each year. Of these, 15 million are premature deaths of people aged between 30 and 69.
With 64 percent of the Pakistani population younger than 30 and 29 percent between the ages of 15 and 29, this should be a clarion call. The country has more young people than it has ever had and this trend will continue to increase until 2050, say demographers.
Pakistan has been feeling the impact of NCDs for years, points out Dr Sania Nishtar, who co-chairs the WHO's high-level independent commission on non-communicable diseases. "NCDs have been known to be the biggest killers since the early 1990s — trans fats, refined sugar, salt, energy-dense, nutrient-poor processed foods increase the risk of NCDs," says Dr Nishtar, who is also a special assistant to Prime Minister Imran Khan on poverty alleviation and social protection.
The four lifestyle factors strongly associated with NCDs include diet, lack of physical activity, alcohol intake and tobacco consumption.
But these diseases, once thought to be primarily afflicting the elderly, are now hounding the country's young population.
According to the National Diabetes Survey of Pakistan (2016-17), 26 percent of the population is diagnosed with diabetes, in which 14 percent is overweight, 44 percent is obese and 46 percent is hypertensive.
The situation is grave indeed. Sixty-five percent of the mortality in Pakistan can be attributed to NCDs, according to Dr Romaina Iqbal, an associate professor at Aga Khan University Hospital. The WHO's NCD Country Profile 2018 put the percentage at 58 percent. And while infectious diseases may still be killing more people in Pakistan, Dr Iqbal says NCDs are "equally concerning".
The four lifestyle factors strongly associated with NCDs include diet, lack of physical activity, alcohol intake and tobacco consumption.