Regular Fruit Juice Intake Solution to Micronutrient Deficiency—Dietitian

August 26, 2019
Regular Fruit Juice Intake Solution to Micronutrient Deficiency—Dietitian

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

Those suffering from micronutrient deficiency, a condition defined as absence of vital micronutrients, have been advised to inculcate the habit of regular fruit juice intake to solve the health issue.

A food and nutrition expert with the Lagos State Government, Mr Olusola Malomo, gave this advice at the August edition of his healthy living dialogue, a programme supported by Chi Limited as part of its ‘no-added sugar’ campaign, which kicked off last year.

At the gathering, the renowned dietitian emphasized that the shortage of such nutrients in the body system was as life-threatening as common health challenges, noting that fruit juice contains essential micronutrients, which are deficient in most foods consumed especially by urban dwellers.

Millions of people, Mr Malomo added, are currently suffering from deficiency in micronutrients.

“Fruit juice contains a combination of macronutrients, micronutrients, phytonutrients and minerals. An array of micronutrients found in fruit juice contributes immensely to the ability of the body to fight free radicals and maintain a healthy status.

“For this reason, micronutrient malnutrition poses equal if not more serious challenge as deficiency in macro nutrients.

“The socio-biological issues that associate with micronutrient malnutrition came to the fore in 1991 at the Hidden Hunger Conference where the world pledged their commitment towards reducing the challenge.  Close to three decades after that conference, millions of people still suffer deficiency in micronutrient malnutrition especially in third world countries like our own,” he said.

In the series, the expert traced the origin of fruit juice to an old French phrase ‘jus, juis, jouis’, which translates to liquid obtained by boiling herbs. He classified the product to not-from-concentrate and from-concentrate category, stressing that 100 percent fruit juice is as good as whole fruit. The expert was reacting to what he called wrong perception that no juice is as healthy or nutritious as whole fruit.

Speaking on the ‘science of fruit juice’, he traced fruit to the farm, saying: “The ripe fruit is harvested and goes straight to the factory where it is then washed, squeezed and rapidly pasteurised before it is then packaged.

“This is a typical process of fruit juice processing”. The nutritionist clarified some distinction between fruit juice ‘not from concentrate’ and ‘from concentrates’ saying fruit juice processed from concentrate only takes a few more stages.”

“Depending on the technique, the juice is either heated by steam so the water in juice evaporates or ‘ultra-filtrated’, and then concentrated using a reversed osmosis technique.

“Juice concentrate is born. Next, water is added back to the concentrate and blended to produce high-quality juice. The juice is pasteurised to ensure that the fruit retains all its natural vitamins and nutrients before packaging,” he added.

“Regardless of the method used, 100 percent fruit juice producers capture the fruit’s natural goodness and the qualities from the whole fruit from which the juice is squeezed. Not-from-concentrate juice and from-concentrate juice use the same fresh raw materials, and they are both considered to be minimally processed fruit.

“Like in the case of Chivita, the fruit juice packed using aseptic method to help protect its natural nutrients and quality without the use of any preservative,” he reiterated.

The Chivita ‘no-added sugar’ campaign seeks to support the sharing of unbiased information on the relevance and nutritional value of 100 percent fruit juice by independent efforts of experts.

Modupe Gbadeyanka

Modupe Gbadeyanka is a fast-rising journalist with Business Post Nigeria. Her passion for journalism is amazing. She is willing to learn more with a view to becoming one of the best pen-pushers in Nigeria. Her role models are the duo of CNN's Richard Quest and Christiane Amanpour.

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