Audio By Carbonatix
Medical professionals are worried over the growing intake of ultra-processed foods among Ghanaians as the country grapples with increasing cases of non-communicable diseases.
Non-communicable diseases, including hypertension and diabetes, are attributed to regular or excess intake of ultra-processed foods which are high in salt, preservatives and chemicals.
Speaking on Luv FM, a pharmacist, Richard Abosi Asamoah highlighted the negative impact of these foods on the liver – an organ for detoxification.
“Processed foods have high salt in them, preservatives and chemicals which all have an effect on your liver due to how long they are kept and the containers the foods are stored in. Excess intake of processed foods or regular intake of processed foods is also dangerous for the liver because now the liver is working more so it becomes compromised,” he said.
Ultra-processed foods are industrially formulated edible substances derived from natural food or synthesised from organic compounds.
Sometimes called highly processed foods, they are a patchwork of ingredients, additives and preservatives that have been altered to include fats, starches, sugars, salts and hydrogenated oils extracted from other foods.
Research reveals that processed foods account for the larger portion of all foods in Ghana’s urban food environment with ultra-processed foods accounting for more than 30% of all processed foods.
Amidst the soaring cost of medication and treatment for diseases that come about as result of the regular intake of such foods, health professionals advise a shift from ultra-processed foods to natural meals that promote good health.
These foods are a threat to the liver’s function apart from the organ being attacked by pathogens.
Excessive drinking of alcohol, some antiviral drugs and the abuse of painkillers can also damage the liver.
“The liver helps in the maintenance of blood sugar levels in the food we ingest, so the higher the sugar the more likely your liver is at risk. The first signs your body shows when your liver is damaged are the jaundice eyes (yellow eyes) at the mild stage with weight loss and loss of appetite,” Mr. Abosi Asamoah said.
Liver conditions can be treated through the right ministering of medications but cannot be cured unless a liver transplant.
"We advise lifestyle changes, some of these soft drinks, carbonated drinks and the alcoholic drinks all give work to the liver to do because it is the liver that breaks them down," Mr. Abosi Asamoah added.
Latest Stories
-
‘Sports belongs to all of us’ – Samson Deen urges unity to transform sector and attract investment
9 minutes -
Understanding the secret behind singles, EPs and albums
11 minutes -
‘This is all we have’ – David Accam backs Ghana’s World Cup Squad
17 minutes -
Alfred Agbesi Woyome: The unsung patron of Ghanaian sports
24 minutes -
Accam hails ‘clear plan’ in Black Stars first game under Queiroz
27 minutes -
Mysteriously missing congressman wins primary after Trump endorsement
34 minutes -
Most workers not saving enough for retirement — Pensions UK
37 minutes -
Foreign nationals among at least 21 killed in Delhi fire
43 minutes -
Celine Dion ‘heartbroken’ by death of Beauty and the Beast singer Peabo Bryson
49 minutes -
Wales 1-1 Ghana: Everything Carlos Queiroz said at post-match
54 minutes -
Smirnoff renews Ghana DJ Awards title sponsorship
55 minutes -
Israel strikes southern Lebanon but partial truce with Hezbollah appears to hold
55 minutes -
Seven killed after drone hits bus in Russia-controlled part of Ukraine
55 minutes -
Ukrainian drones hit St Petersburg as Putin’s flagship economic forum opens
56 minutes -
KATH Accident and Emergency Centre resumes admission of dire emergency cases
57 minutes