• Latest
Hidden Sugars in Baby Food: Makerere Researcher Warns of Health Risks in Uganda’s Fast-Changing Diet

Hidden Sugars in Baby Food: Makerere Researcher Warns of Health Risks in Uganda’s Fast-Changing Diet

2 months ago
Uganda to Host NAM Midterm Ministerial Review Next Week

Uganda to Host NAM Midterm Ministerial Review Next Week

13 hours ago
3rd Stanbic Summit Charts Course for East Africa’s Growth and Resilience

3rd Stanbic Summit Charts Course for East Africa’s Growth and Resilience

13 hours ago
Uganda, Russia Deepen Trade & Tech Ties as Makerere Seals Academic Pact

Uganda, Russia Deepen Trade & Tech Ties as Makerere Seals Academic Pact

14 hours ago
Uganda and Somalia Seal New Pacts on Security, Education and Immigration

Uganda and Somalia Seal New Pacts on Security, Education and Immigration

14 hours ago
City Festival: Kiira Motors, KCCA to Offer Free Electric Rides

City Festival: Kiira Motors, KCCA to Offer Free Electric Rides

15 hours ago
St. Julian Students Name and Nurture Trees in Equity Bank’s 1,000-Tree Campaign

St. Julian Students Name and Nurture Trees in Equity Bank’s 1,000-Tree Campaign

15 hours ago
SoftPower News
Thursday, October 9, 2025
  • News
  • Tourism & Travel
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
  • Regional
    • Kenya
    • Rwanda
    • Tanzania
    • Burundi
    • South Sudan
    • DR Congo
  • Defence & Security
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Africa
    • Columnists
    • Education
    • Health
      • COVID-19
    • International News
    • News in Pictures
    • OpEd
    • Pearl Of Africa
    • People
    • Politics
    • Special Reports
    • Women
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Tourism & Travel
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
  • Regional
    • Kenya
    • Rwanda
    • Tanzania
    • Burundi
    • South Sudan
    • DR Congo
  • Defence & Security
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Africa
    • Columnists
    • Education
    • Health
      • COVID-19
    • International News
    • News in Pictures
    • OpEd
    • Pearl Of Africa
    • People
    • Politics
    • Special Reports
    • Women
No Result
View All Result
SoftPower News
No Result
View All Result
Home Education

Hidden Sugars in Baby Food: Makerere Researcher Warns of Health Risks in Uganda’s Fast-Changing Diet

by Rogers Atukunda
August 2, 2025
Hidden Sugars in Baby Food: Makerere Researcher Warns of Health Risks in Uganda’s Fast-Changing Diet
602
VIEWS

Makerere University researcher Dr. Catherine L. Mwesigwa has issued a stark warning about the high levels of sugar in commercial baby foods in Uganda, highlighting urgent gaps in labelling, regulation, and public awareness.

Speaking at the PhD Completion Grant Research Dissemination Workshop, Dr. Mwesigwa shared findings from her recent study which revealed that most baby food products on the market contain dangerously high amounts of added sugars, often hidden under different names, and are misleadingly marketed to unsuspecting parents.

Related Stories

Uganda to Host NAM Midterm Ministerial Review Next Week

3rd Stanbic Summit Charts Course for East Africa’s Growth and Resilience

Uganda, Russia Deepen Trade & Tech Ties as Makerere Seals Academic Pact

“As a mother and a scientist, this topic is personal,” Dr. Mwesigwa told participants gathered at Makerere’s School of Food Science Conference Hall. “When I had my first child, I realised how easy it is to pick up a colourful package with comforting claims—only to find it’s packed with sugar and additives.”

Her study, conducted under the Department of Paediatric Dentistry in the School of Health Sciences, examined both the sugar content and labelling practices of popular baby foods in Uganda’s urban markets.

The results are troubling: three in five children had consumed ultra-processed food the day before their interview, 90% had taken sugary drinks or sweetened porridge and some children were consuming more than 50 grams of sugar per day—just from baby foods.

“Some products, like porridge mixes, contained up to 14 grams of sugar per serving. With multiple feedings a day, the cumulative sugar intake is far beyond what is safe for a young child,” she explained.

According to World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines, free sugars should account for less than 10% of daily energy intake—and ideally, less than 5% to reduce the risk of non-communicable diseases. Yet, most baby food products surveyed exceeded these limits.

Dr. Mwesigwa also flagged serious concerns around marketing and labelling: use of unverified health claims like “Boosts brain power”, lack of clear ingredient breakdowns and age-appropriateness, attractive baby images used as marketing ploys—contrary to WHO recommendations and sugar listed under multiple names: glucose, fructose, sucrose, etc., which confuses consumers.

“Parents are being misled by marketing tactics that mask poor nutritional quality,” she said. “We need to start telling the truth on labels.”

The issue is part of a wider nutrition transition in Uganda, where families—especially in urban centres—are shifting away from traditional foods like millet and fresh fruit in favour of convenient, energy-dense, ultra-processed options. This shift, Dr. Mwesigwa warned, is happening without sufficient regulation or public health messaging.

Policy Gaps and Recommendations

Despite the existence of Ministry of Health guidelines on complementary feeding, enforcement remains weak. Uganda lacks strict limits on added sugar in baby foods and has no binding regulations on marketing or labelling.

Dr. Mwesigwa offered four key recommendations.

Policy Action: enforce sugar limits in baby foods, ban marketing of ultra-processed foods to young children and standardise and regulate food labelling.

Clear Public Messaging: develop simple, accessible nutrition guidance for mothers and caregivers.

School Curriculum: integrate nutrition education into early childhood and primary school programmes.

Community Awareness: promote dialogue on long-term effects of early sugar consumption.

Tech-Driven Solutions

Dr. Mwesigwa and her team have submitted a grant proposal under the NIH Fogarty programme to develop a mobile application tailored for Ugandan mothers. The app will provide evidence-based guidance on baby food choices, including local recipe suggestions and culturally appropriate feeding practices.

“This is about empowering parents with real information,” she said. “Technology can be part of the solution.”

Her research was presented as part of Makerere University’s PhD Completion Grant Initiative (2021–2025), led by the Directorate of Graduate Training. Now in its fourth year, the programme has supported 65 doctoral students to finalise and showcase their work, contributing to national development priorities through applied, locally relevant research.

“If we want a healthier future for our children, we must start by being honest about what we feed them,” Dr. Mwesigwa concluded. “The first step is better information—and the next is action.”

Tags: Dr Catherine L. MwesigwaHidden sugars in baby foodMakerere UniversityresearchSoftPowerSoftPower NewsSugars in baby foodsTop Uganda NewsUganda

Recent Stories

Uganda to Host NAM Midterm Ministerial Review Next Week

3rd Stanbic Summit Charts Course for East Africa’s Growth and Resilience

Uganda, Russia Deepen Trade & Tech Ties as Makerere Seals Academic Pact

Uganda and Somalia Seal New Pacts on Security, Education and Immigration

City Festival: Kiira Motors, KCCA to Offer Free Electric Rides

St. Julian Students Name and Nurture Trees in Equity Bank’s 1,000-Tree Campaign

SoftPower News Logo

SoftPower News is a subsidiary of SoftPower Communications LLC, a Ugandan digital media group. Keep posted of the latest from Uganda and East Africa.
Plot 4B Malcolm X, Kololo
P.O Box 1497, Kampala - Uganda
Tel: +256-392-001-701
Email: info@softpower.ug

This news site is licenced by Uganda Communications Commission (UCC)

ADVERTISEMENT
  • News
  • Tourism & Travel
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Regional
  • Defence & Security
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • More

© SoftPower News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

error: Content is protected
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Tourism & Travel
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
  • Regional
    • Kenya
    • Rwanda
    • Tanzania
    • Burundi
    • South Sudan
    • DR Congo
  • Defence & Security
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Africa
    • Columnists
    • Education
    • Health
      • COVID-19
    • International News
    • News in Pictures
    • OpEd
    • Pearl Of Africa
    • People
    • Politics
    • Special Reports
    • Women

© SoftPower News

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?