Healthcare

Why The Food We Eat Is Eating Us

I nev­er imag­ined that a sim­ple pack­et of maize flour would teach me so much about Kenya. One evening, as I reached for my usu­al brand, I noticed the bold label that read “for­ti­fied for your health.” Out of habit, I turned it over to see what that real­ly meant. The fine print left me with more ques­tions than answers. How much of what we eat is tru­ly nour­ish­ing, and how much is slow­ly weak­en­ing us? That small moment in the super­mar­ket prompt­ed me to search through reports I had nev­er intend­ed to read. What I found should wake us up.

Across our vil­lages and towns, the evi­dence is heart­break­ing. Accord­ing to the 2022 Kenya Demo­graph­ic and Health Sur­vey, 18% of chil­dren under five are stunt­ed. Behind that nation­al aver­age, deep­er inequal­i­ties exist. Kil­i­fi has a rate of 37 per­cent, West Pokot at 34 per­cent, and Sam­bu­ru at 31 per­cent. In parts of Kenya, one in three chil­dren will nev­er reach their full height or poten­tial due to their diet. There has been progress since 2014, when stunt­ing was at 26%.

At the same time, our food sys­tem is evolv­ing in ways that threat­en our future. Kenya now faces a triple bur­den of mal­nu­tri­tion, where under­nu­tri­tion, micronu­tri­ent defi­cien­cy, and obe­si­ty all exist with­in the same house­holds. The World Health Orga­ni­za­tion reports that poor diets cause eleven mil­lion deaths world­wide each year, sur­pass­ing tobac­co. That glob­al tragedy is qui­et­ly hap­pen­ing here at home.

A recent assess­ment by the Access to Nutri­tion Ini­tia­tive showed that near­ly nine­ty per­cent of pack­aged foods and drinks sold in Kenya would require health warn­ing labels for high lev­els of salt, sug­ar, or sat­u­rat­ed fat under our new Nutri­ent Pro­file Mod­el. We’ve turned con­ve­nience into slow poi­son. Urban shelves are filled with chips, sug­ary drinks, and white bread, while tra­di­tion­al foods like mil­let, sorghum, cas­sa­va, and beans are often rel­e­gat­ed to the background.

Mean­while, the cost of eat­ing well is ris­ing beyond the reach of most fam­i­lies. Food infla­tion aver­aged eight per­cent in 2025, mak­ing even basic sta­ples unaf­ford­able for many house­holds. When mon­ey is tight, nutri­tion becomes the first sac­ri­fice. Fam­i­lies buy what fills the stom­ach, not what sus­tains the body. It is no sur­prise that sev­en­ty-nine per­cent of Kenyans can­not afford a healthy diet, accord­ing to the Access to Nutri­tion Mar­ket Assess­ment of 2025. Behind every polit­i­cal debate, this qui­et suf­fer­ing continues…

Mal­nu­tri­tion robs Kenya of bil­lions through lost pro­duc­tiv­i­ty, poor health, and weak learn­ing out­comes. The World Bank esti­mates that reduc­ing child stunt­ing could raise nation­al GDP by up to three per­cent. A nour­ished child learns bet­ter, works smarter, and helps build a stronger nation.

The good news, as I have found out, is that solu­tions are avail­able. Kenya was once praised world­wide for elim­i­nat­ing iodine defi­cien­cy through the iodiza­tion of salt. We can repli­cate that suc­cess to address oth­er nutri­ents. The Nation­al Food and Nutri­tion Secu­ri­ty Pol­i­cy of 2025 pro­vides a strong foun­da­tion, but pol­i­cy alone can­not nour­ish a nation. It must be well-fund­ed, effec­tive­ly enforced, and imple­ment­ed. The for­ti­fi­ca­tion of maize and wheat flour requires ver­i­fi­ca­tion, not just claims. Afla­tox­in in stored grain should be treat­ed as a nation­al emer­gency, just as we should stop using pes­ti­cides that are banned elsewhere.

The pri­vate sec­tor must eth­i­cal­ly refor­mu­late prod­ucts, reduce harm­ful fats, and strict­ly fol­low label­ing laws. Retail­ers should pri­or­i­tize health as much as prof­it. Cit­i­zens must choose whole­some, local­ly grown foods. This is not nos­tal­gia; it is a mat­ter of nation­al security.

Nutri­tion is about sur­vival, not style. Every meal should be hon­est, not harm­ful. A nation that neglects its diet weak­ens its future. Kenya needs to act now by unit­ing strict food poli­cies, indus­try, and fam­i­ly life for bet­ter health.

Friends, do you agree that we can’t build a strong nation on bad food? Think Green, Act Green!

KaluaGreen
About Dr. Kalua Green

He is the Chief Stew­ard of Green Africa Group, a con­glom­er­ate that was envi­sioned in 1991 to con­nect, pro­duce and impact var­i­ous aspi­ra­tions of human­i­ty through Sus­tain­able Mobil­i­ty & Safe­ty Solu­tions, Eco­pre­neur­ship & Agribusi­ness, Ship­ping & Logis­tics, Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Ini­tia­tives, as well as Hos­pi­tal­i­ty & fur­nish­ings sectors

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