The Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) has launched Coalition for Policy Advocacy on SSB (Sugar-Sweetened Beverages) Tax, with a mandate to, among others, ensure the funds are properly earmarked, and used, for health interventions, especially Nigeriaās rising non-communicable diseases (NCD) burden.[spacer height=”25px”]
The launch was the high point of a webinar CAPPA organised to commemorate the 2022 World Diabetes Day marked annually on 14th November, on Monday, November 21 with participants drawn from civil society, community-based organisations, health advocacy groups, professional bodies, and the media, among others to discuss Nigeriaās Rising non-communicable diseases (NCD) burden.[spacer height=”25px”]
While launching the coalition, Akinbode Oluwafemi, Executive Director of CAPPA, disclosed that the participants would form the fulcrum of the coalition as suggested by the attendees and more organisations with the same campaign goals would be brought in to strengthen it.[spacer height=”25px”]
The webinar addressed Nigeriaās public health challenges, and the legal landscape for a sustainable pathway to significantly reduce the incidences of NCDs in Nigeria.[spacer height=”25px”]
In his welcome address, Oluwafemi identified some of the health issues associated with the excessive consumption of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages (SSBs) which include weight gain leading to obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart diseases, among others others.[spacer height=”25px”]
āStudies show that about 39% of all deaths are related to NCDs, because of unhealthy lifestyles including diet (excessive consumption of sugar), and sedentary lifestyle (lack of physical activity).[spacer height=”25px”]
āThe launch of Nigeriaās multi-sectoral action plan 2019-2025 for the prevention of NCDs, has a policy document that listed the cause of NCD as the consumption of sugar,ā Oluwafemi said.[spacer height=”25px”]
He explained that the Finance Act 2021 imposes a tax of N10 per litre on non-alcoholic and carbonated sugar-sweetened beverages, which is lower than the recommended WHO standard.[spacer height=”25px”]
He stressed the need to ensure that the SSB tax is institutionalized, sustained, reviewed upwardly, and earmarked for the health sector.[spacer height=”25px”]
Dr. Francis Fagbule, a public health consultant with the University College Hospital, Ibadan, while making his presentation on the Public Challenges of Nigeriaās huge NCD burden, lamented the astronomical rise in Nigeriaās disease burden which puts the increase in prevalence at 150%.[spacer height=”25px”]
Fagbule, however, expressed the need for more evidence generation to drive home the message of harms done by the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in Nigeria.[spacer height=”25px”]
He further noted that Nigerians must strive to know their health status while the CSOs continue to raise awareness, and advocate for pro-health laws in the country.[spacer height=”25px”]
Nigerian Coordinator for the Global Health Advocacy Incubator (GHAI), Joy Amafah, expressed satisfaction at the turn out of participants at the engagement which she said showed a cross-sectoral commitment to finding a lasting solution to Nigeriaās NCDs problem that is driven by the people.[spacer height=”25px”]
On the need for a sustainable approach to combating NCDs, Amafah stated that there is a need for deliberate policy change through data-driven advocacy, legal framework, and industry monitoring to discourage the industry and their allies from setting policy agenda for the country on public health.[spacer height=”25px”]
In 2021, Nigeria introduced a N10/litre excise tax on sugar-sweetened beverages produced and distributed in the country.[spacer height=”25px”]
The tax regime, which only came into force in June 2022, has come under huge attacks from the producers of carbonated drinks and their allies.[spacer height=”25px”]
The industry has threatened shutdown of businesses at different times and have continued to use misinformation in the media to pitch the public against the government in order to reverse the tax.[spacer height=”25px”]
However, the N10/litre tax is a far cry from the minimum 20% increase in final price of sugar-sweetened beverages as recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as an effective way of combating non-communicable diseases.[spacer height=”25px”]
The participants at the virtual meeting agreed on the need to have a sustained conversation through to push for the policy changes required to achieve the set goals.[spacer height=”25px”]
Dr. Adeniyi Oginni, President of the Christian Initiative for Nation Building (CIBN) and Executive Secretary, Osun Health Insurance Agency, reiterated the need for the tax to be increased and properly earmarked for health interventions.[spacer height=”25px”]
Dr Oginni, who joined from Cairo, urged the participants to coalesce and advocate as one strong unit.[spacer height=”25px”]
Source: Vanguard Newspaper