Key Points

The Health Ministry dismissed reports about warning labels on Indian snacks as false. The advisory focuses on workplace health awareness, not food bans. It aims to combat obesity and diabetes through behavioral nudges. The initiative supports healthy choices without targeting traditional street food.

Key Points: Health Ministry Denies Warning Labels on Samosas Jalebis as Baseless

  • Health Ministry debunks claims of warning labels on samosas and jalebis
  • Advisory promotes workplace awareness on hidden fats and sugar
  • Initiative part of NP-NCD to combat obesity and diabetes
  • No targeting of Indian street food culture, only general health nudges
2 min read

Misleading, incorrect, baseless: Health Ministry debunks claim of health warnings on Samosas, Jalebis

Health Ministry clarifies no warning labels on Indian snacks, calls reports misleading and baseless while promoting workplace health awareness.

"The advisory does not direct warning labels on food products sold by vendors – Health Ministry"

New Delhi, July 15

The Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has debunked media reports claiming that the Ministry has directed the issue of Warning Labels on food products such as samosas, jalebis, and laddoos, calling them "misleading, incorrect, and baseless."

The Union Health Ministry had separately issued an advisory which is an initiative towards making healthier choices at work places. It advises about display of Boards in various workplaces such as lobbies, canteens, cafeterias, meeting rooms etc., to raise awareness on harmful consumption of hidden fats and excess sugar in various food items. These Boards are meant to serve as daily reminders on fighting obesity, the burden of which is sharply rising in the country.

The Health Ministry Advisory does not direct Warning Labels on food products sold by vendors, and has not been selective towards Indian snacks. It does not target India's rich street food culture.

The general advisory is a behavioural nudge to make people aware about hidden fats and excess sugar in all food products and not specifically to any particular food product. The Advisory mentions other health messages such as promoting healthy meals such as fruits, vegetables and low-fat options, along with making suggestions for opting for physical activity, such as encouraging the use of stairs, organising short exercise breaks and facilitating walking routes.

This initiative is part of the Ministry's flagship initiatives under the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases (NP-NCD). Excessive consumption of oil and sugar is a key contributor to the rising rate of obesity, diabetes, hypertension and other lifestyle-related diseases.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The media needs to be more responsible before spreading such fake news. This caused unnecessary panic among small food vendors who are already struggling post-pandemic. Health awareness is important but let's not target specific foods.
A
Ananya R
While I'm relieved about samosas, we can't ignore India's growing health crisis. Maybe food stalls could offer healthier versions alongside traditional snacks? Like baked samosas or jalebis with less sugar? Just a thought...
V
Vikram M
This is typical sensational journalism! First create fake news, then get views. Meanwhile, actual health issues like air pollution and water contamination need more attention than hypothetical samosa warnings.
K
Kavya N
The advisory makes sense - we do need reminders about healthy eating at workplaces. But targeting traditional Indian sweets specifically would have been unfair when packaged western snacks are equally unhealthy.
S
Siddharth J
Respectfully, while the clarification is welcome, the Health Ministry could communicate better. Their initial advisory was vague enough to cause confusion. Clear messaging prevents misinformation.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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