globe Asia Times Online
  June 17, 2000 atimes.com  

Search button Letters button Editorials button Media/IT button Asian Crisis button Global Economy button Business Briefs button Oceania button Central Asia/Russia button India/Pakistan button Koreas button Japan button Southeast Asia button China button Front button








India/Pakistan



Salt debate taken with a pinch of iodine
By Ranjit Devraj

NEW DELHI - All it takes to prevent millions of Indians from growing into cretins is a pinch of iodine in their salt, say top medical scientists.

But the government has other ideas. Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's government, apparently bowing to pressure from salt retailers, is to lift later this month, a ban on the sale of non-iodized salt in the country.

Alarmed public health experts say this will undo the gains of a successful, internationally-acclaimed public health program to tackle iodine deficiency disorders (IDD). According to experts like N Kochupillai, head of endocrinology and metabolism at the prestigious All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, at least 200 million Indians are already prone to IDD.

Despite the universalization of salt iodization since 1984, which was made compulsory in 1998, 70 million Indians suffer from the unsightly swelling of the neck caused by overworked thyroid glands. ''Tragically, this proposition to lift the ban conceived by the government is unthinkable and anti-public health . . . iodine is an essential nutrient for human survival and development,'' says Kochupillai. ''Experience has shown time and again in India and elsewhere that withdrawal of universal salt iodization leads to re-occurrence of iodine deficiency disorders and causes brain damage in children.''

Iodine is necessary for the production of thyroxine - a hormone which plays a pivotal role in foetal growth and development and in childhood and adolescence, besides keeping the body warm and active through the life span. Varying degrees of thyroxine deficiency at the foetal and neo-natal stage can thwart mental growth. This ranges from loss of intellectual potential to extreme forms of irreversible brain and body defects.

Sales of iodized salt in India began as early as 1962 while the production of iodized salt jumped from 300,000 tonnes in 1983 to 4.2 million tonnes by 1997. This has not been easy considering that only 850 of the estimated 10,000 common salt factories in the country, are registered producers. Branded salt made by the big companies accounts for less than a fifth of total output.

The cottage salt industry - historically supported by Mahatma Gandhi in his fight against British colonial taxes - enjoys the advantage of the sheer cheapness of its product which sells at a third of the 20 cents it costs for a kilogram of branded salt. According to Kochupillai, it is the 40 percent Indians living below the poverty line and already nutritionally deficient, who are likely to buy the cheaper, non-iodized salt.

However, political leaders in several coastal states have been protesting against the ban on the sale of uniodized salt, saying it has snatched away the traditional livelihoods of tens of thousands of people who make salt from seawater. Ram Vilas Paswan, an influential politician and Minister for Communications has argued in parliament that the ban only helped big-time manufacturers who could afford to import iodine and add value to table salt by iodizing and packaging. His critics say that, in fact, the ban hurts traders and retailers rather than traditional salt-makers. Before the introduction of the ban, retailers were known to make large profits by lifting cottage salt dirt-cheap directly from traditional salt-makers and selling it dear in the cities.

The government justifies its decision by saying ''a public health measure should not be enforced through statutory provisions.'' Officials argue that ''compulsion in such matters of individual choice is undesirable.''

But public health experts disagree. Retorts Kochupillai:''If the government argues that no public health policy should be enforced then what about universal immunization or chlorination of drinking water.''

Leading Indian IDD expert V Ramalingaswami, one of the pioneers of research on hyperthyroidism who linked it to iodine deficiency in the 1950s, thinks the same. ''In the Indian context it is not possible to leave the choice of using iodized salt or non-iodized salt to individuals because it would involve considerable inputs from the point of view of public education and public health,'' says Ramalingaswami.

Those in favor of lifting the ban include a section of urban health care professionals catering to rich Indians who say that their affluent clientele suffers hormonal imbalances from excess iodine. According to R P Singh, endocrinological consultant to the $2-billion Apollo Hospitals in the Indian capital, the diet of affluent urban Indians is already rich in iodine and does not require supplementation. Many of his patients suffer from hyperthyroidism caused by excess dietary iodine and manifest as hirsutism among women and enlarged breasts in men, he says.

But Kochupillai counters that hyperthyroidism cannot be caused by excess iodine unless it is taken in extremely large doses. ''Anything taken in excess is likely to be harmful,'' he points out.

Salt iodization is now compulsory in 110 countries. Recent reports from several developed nations indicate a re-emergence of iodine deficiency, prompting the US government to sanction $5 million for tackling the problem in that country.

(Inter Press Service)



Front | China | Southeast Asia | Japan | Koreas | India/Pakistan | Central Asia/Russia | Oceania

Business Briefs | Global Economy | Asian Crisis | Media/IT | Editorials | Letters | Search/Archive


back to the top

©1999 Asia Times Online Co., Ltd.
discount hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, lodging airline ticket, airline tickets, cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets car rental, car rentals, discount car rental, cheap car rental vacation, holiday, vacation packages, holiday packages, cruise, cruises, cruise packages london travel, paris travel, madrid travel, rome travel, london hotels, paris hotels, rome hotels, europe travel discounts hotel rooms, airline tickets, car rental, cheap airline tickets, vacation packages, cruise packages cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms, cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets
hotel reservations, hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms hotel reservations, hotel rooms, cheap hotel rooms, discount hotel rooms thailand, thai, bangkok, phuket, pattaya, chiangmai, chiangrai, bangkok hotels, thailand hotels, thailand vacation, postcards airline tickets cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, discount hotels, car rental, cruise cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, discount hotels, car rental, cruise cheap airline tickets, discount airline tickets, discount hotels, car rental, cruise airline tickets, news, asia news
airline tickets, hotel rooms, car rental, vacation packages, holiday packages, cruise packages airline tickets, hotel rooms, car rental, vacation packages, holiday packages, cruise packages airline tickets, hotel rooms, car rental, vacation packages, holiday packages, cruise packages search engines, google, yahoo, altavista, hotbot, excite, directhit, inktomi search engines, google, yahoo, altavista, hotbot, excite, directhit, inktomi asia news, asia commentary, asia travel, airline tickets airline tickets car rental, cheap car rental, discount car rental, alamo, budget, hertz, avis, sears
asian sex gazette