logo
Unhealthiest ready meals REVEALED: Worst offenders salty as 10 portions of McDonald's fries - is your favourite on the list?

Unhealthiest ready meals REVEALED: Worst offenders salty as 10 portions of McDonald's fries - is your favourite on the list?

Daily Mail​13-05-2025

saltier than ten portions of McDonald's fries, a damning audit has revealed.
The probe, by campaign group Action on Salt, looked at the nutritional content of more than 1,500 meals sold by more than 30 brands and supermarkets in the UK.
Results showed that the saltiest option contains a whopping 6.1g per serving—nearly twice as salty as seawater, two margarita pizzas (5.2g) or almost ten servings of chips at the fast-food chain.
By comparison, the NHS recommends adults only eat 6g of salt for the entire day, for children the limit is even lower.
One in five ready meals for sale in Britain exceeded the recommended daily limits for salt, fat and unsaturated fat, Action in Salt found.
Even some seemingly healthy dishes contained far more of all three nutrients than recommended.
Experts today labelled the probe's findings 'concerning' and 'unacceptable', arguing manufacturers must reduce the salt content of their meals and protect public health.
Having excess salt in your system leads to water retention in the blood raising your blood pressure.
This can, subsequently, raise the risk of a potentially fatal heart attack or stroke.
Heart disease and strokes are one of Britain's biggest killers, killing about 160,000 a year, with the American death toll about five times higher.
Action on Salt's investigation found all of the ready meals produced by chef and healthy eating campaigner Jamie Oliver were dangerously high in salt, containing more than 1.5g per 100g.
Eighty-three per cent were also found to be high in both fat and saturated fat, and all were found to be low in fibre.
Meanwhile, Royal's cottage pie, sold by the likes of Sainsbury's, topped the list for salt content at 6.12g.
Royal also took another top spot with its Chicken Tikka Masala with Saffron Rice which had almost 4.7g of salt per serving.
Iceland's Taste of Italy Vegetable Lasagne was another high scorer with 3.9g of salt per serving, over half of an adult's daily recommended salt limit.
By supermarket, Iceland had the most salty ready meals with 86 per cent of its products high in salt.
This was followed by Aldi (70 per cent), Lidl (64 per cent), and M&S and Sainsbury's (54 per cent each).
Morrisons performed the best of out of the supermarkets, with only 40 per cent of its ready meals high in salt.
Action on Salt also found substantial variation on salt content within different types of ready meals.
For example, Sainsbury's Free From Spaghetti Bolognese contained 4.35g of salt per serving.
This was 8.5 times more salt than another product Kirsty's Pasta Bolognese Gluten Free which only had 0.5g of salt.
Trendy ready meals made by Charlie Bingham weren't far behind Jamie Oliver's in terms of salt content with 91 per cent high in salt.
NHS guidelines suggest adults should consume no more than 6g of salt per day.
The WHO, however, recommend just 5g.
A diet too high in salt is linked to high blood pressure, hypertension, as the sodium in salt leads to more water in your blood vessels.
Studies have suggested a high an intake of salt is associated with a 23 per cent increase in the risk of stroke and a 14 per cent increase in the risk of cardiovascular disease.
Other research has indicated that high salt intakes cause stiffening of blood vessels and arteries.
In turn, these changes may result in a higher risk of heart disease.
What is the maximum amount of salt a child should eat per day?
Age
Salt
One to three
Four to six
Seven to 10
11 to 18
2g
3g
5g
6g
Source: The British Heart Foundation and NHS
Of the 1,511 ready meals analysed Action of Salt found 56 per cent were high in salt, 42 per cent high in saturated fat and 71 per cent low in fibre.
One in five were found in be both high in fat and salt simultaneously.
Action on Salt's head of impact and research Sonia Pombo said voluntary targets for producers to reduce salt content introduced in 2006 were clearly not working.
'With over half of ready meals found to be unacceptably high in salt, consumers' health are being put at serious risk, often without realising it,' she said.
'It should not be this hard to eat healthily.
'We now need the government to stop pandering to industry interests and introduce mandatory salt reduction targets with real consequences for non-compliance.'
Dr Pauline Swift, chair of the charity Blood Pressure UK, also called for action.
'Excess salt in our food is directly linked to raised blood pressure–the biggest risk factor for strokes, heart disease and kidney disease–all of which are completely avoidable,' she said.
'The government must act now to enforce stronger salt reduction targets and protect public health before even more lives are needlessly lost.'
Professor Bryan Williams OBE, chief medical and scientific officer at the British Heart Foundation, added: 'This concerning data shows it is not always straightforward for people to find ready meals which are low in salt.
'Food companies must do more to reduce salt in their products, so that the healthy options are more easily available.'
The NHS warns that too much fat in your diet, especially saturated fats, can raise your cholesterol, which in turn increases the risk of heart disease.
On the other hand, getting enough fibre, also called roughage, helps with digestion, preventing constipation and is also linked with a lower risk of heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and bowel cancer.
Ready meals are now considered a staple of the modern British diet with surveys suggesting three out of four people consuming at least one per week.
The Department of Health and Social Care was contacted for comment.
Action on Salt's analysis of ready meals was based on products surveyed in January of this year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

It really shouldn't be radical to expect the NHS to put patients first
It really shouldn't be radical to expect the NHS to put patients first

Telegraph

time13 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

It really shouldn't be radical to expect the NHS to put patients first

SIR – Sir Jim Mackey, the new NHS boss (The Saturday Interview, June 28), states that the service is deaf to criticism, has wasted a lot of money and sees patients as an inconvenience. The general public has known all this for far too long. One truly hopes that Sir Jim's insight will bring about some real changes, and that he will have the strength to see them through. Peter Rosie Ringwood, Hampshire SIR – Sir Jim Mackey says 'it feels like we've built mechanisms to keep the public away because it's an inconvenience'. I do find that, when I am able to see a doctor, I tend to start the conversation with the words: 'I am sorry to bother you, but …' If I were receiving any other service for which I was paying (as we do for the NHS through our taxes), it would never occur to me to say that. Felicity Guille London SW6 SIR – Sir Jim Mackey acknowledges the failure of the NHS and hopes that this bureaucratic Titanic might avoid its fatal iceberg. He identifies the walls erected by the NHS to obstruct access – not least the high one in front of primary care, which is the point of first contact for patients who choose not to abuse A&E departments. Large general practices, often the result of mergers, should create a daily, open-access morning clinic for patients who perceive their problem to be urgent; after receiving a ticket, they would be seen in order. Each GP would take turns to run the clinic. The early weeks would overwhelm, but demand would start to settle down. Some patients, after waiting for several hours, would realise their problem was not urgent, and opt for an arranged appointment. Remote consultations can never compete with the doctor-patient chemistry in the consultation room. Dr Adrian Crisp Weston Colville, Cambridgeshire SIR – Your Leading Article (' Reform the NHS, not our shopping baskets ', June 29) discusses Labour's plan to introduce yet more heavy-handed measures. Forcing shops to promote fruit and vegetables will not address the causes of obesity. Better education, for instance, could genuinely help to combat it, but piling more regulations on to shops will only push prices higher – something no one wants. Charlie Temple Billericay, Essex SIR – The plan for cutting the calorie content of the average shopping basket is a step in the right direction, but does not go far enough. I suggest recruiting food police to stand at checkouts and fine us £5 for each non-government-approved item in our trolleys – reduced to £2.50 if we return the item to the shelves. Fines for bottles or cans of alcoholic drinks would, naturally, be much higher. Max Sawyer Stamford, Lincolnshire

Drug shortages causing ‘unprecedented' issues for patients
Drug shortages causing ‘unprecedented' issues for patients

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Drug shortages causing ‘unprecedented' issues for patients

Medicine shortages are now a "distressing new normal" for patients, posing a significant risk to public health, pharmacists have warned. A new report from Community Pharmacy England (CPE), which represents over 10,000 community pharmacies, highlighted the "unprecedented" issues patients are facing due to a lack of available drugs. The organisation's survey, which polled more than 4,300 pharmacy owners and 1,600 pharmacy workers across England, found the situation to be worse than when a similar assessment was conducted three years ago. It found: Some 95 per cent of pharmacy workers said patients are still being inconvenienced by ongoing shortages, while 73 per cent said supply issues are putting patient's health at risk; Many are faced with frustrated patients, with 79 per cent reporting incidents of patient aggression when medicines were unavailable or delayed; Some 86 per cent of pharmacy owners said shortages are leading patients to visit multiple pharmacies in search of medicines; Looking for medicines is time-consuming for staff, with 39 per cent of pharmacy staff now spending one to two hours every day trying to get hold of drugs, with more than a quarter (26 per cent) spending longer than two hours; Almost half (49 per cent) of pharmacy owners said patient services are being negatively affected by pressures on their business, and 94 per cent link this directly to medicine supply problems. Community Pharmacy England said that, in the last year alone, the Government has issued serious shortage protocols (SSPs) for key medicines used to treat schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, angina, HRT, antibiotics such as cefalexin and clarithromycin, and medicines for cardiovascular disease and pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy. There are also ongoing shortages of drugs for ADHD, diabetes and epilepsy, it said. SSPs occur to identify alternative drugs or quantity that may be supplied if a medicine is out of stock. Janet Morrison, chief executive of Community Pharmacy England, said: 'Our survey shows that as medicine supply issues remain a daily reality across the country, the risk to patient health has become a distressing new normal. 'Delays in receiving medicines not only disrupt patients' treatment but can also cause unnecessary stress and potential harm to their health. 'The ongoing time and effort required to manage shortages also adds pressure on pharmacy teams, who are already working at full stretch. 'Our survey results suggest a system stuck that is stuck at breaking point.' She said the problems were caused by issues ranging from product discontinuations to global supply chain challenges. 'We also believe that consistently low medicine prices in the UK have made the market less appealing to manufacturers, further weakening the resilience of the supply system,' she said. 'The future is uncertain, with expected drug price inflation and potential knock-on effects across the NHS, but we welcome the Government's commitment to ongoing work to shore up supply chain resilience and will be monitoring the situation.' When compared with 2022, the 2025 survey found a worsening picture, with 51 per cent of pharmacy teams in 2022 saying patients were being negatively affected by supply delays, rising to 73 per cent in 2025. Supply issues were also more frequent, while teams are spending longer trying to sort them out. Fin McCaul, a community pharmacy owner in Greater Manchester, said: 'It's not just a matter of running out of stock: patients are rightly frustrated, and their health is being harmed. 'Our teams are caught in the middle, spending hours calling suppliers and contacting GPs, trying to find alternatives, while also trying to keep patients informed. 'The constant uncertainty is affecting both our staff and patients, and each year it only seems to get worse.' It comes as a Healthwatch England survey of more than 7,000 adults found one in four continue to report medicine shortages, while issues such as prescription delays, pharmacy closures, and affordability are on the rise. Some 18 per cent reported prescription errors, 5 per cent were worried about cost and 9 per cent reported unexpected pharmacy closures. The poll also suggested people are not always aware of the conditions that pharmacists can treat in order to avoid a trip to the GP. A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: 'This government inherited ongoing global supply problems, but we have robust measures in place to mitigate disruption for patients. 'We are working to build the resilience of medicine supply chains and prevent future disruption as we get the NHS back on its feet. 'We have recently agreed an extra £617 million of funding over two years with Community Pharmacy England to help community pharmacies, support the sector and provide patients with greater services closer to home. 'Deliberate violence or abuse directed at healthcare staff is unacceptable and all staff, including pharmacists and their teams, deserve to work in a safe and secure environment.'

Lucy Letby and Harold Shipman-style NHS killing sprees will be prevented in future with high-tech AI reforms
Lucy Letby and Harold Shipman-style NHS killing sprees will be prevented in future with high-tech AI reforms

The Sun

time28 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Lucy Letby and Harold Shipman-style NHS killing sprees will be prevented in future with high-tech AI reforms

HI-TECH NHS reforms will help to prevent the next Lucy Letby or Harold Shipman, Wes Streeting has vowed. The Health Secretary has insisted his AI rollout will stop serious incidents slipping through the net. 2 He says he will introduce new measures to identify patterns of abuse, serious injury and deaths via an early alert system — part of a ten-year plan to be unveiled later this week. Mr Streeting last night said: 'Even a single lapse that puts a patient at risk is one too many. 'Behind every safety breach is a person — a life altered, a family devastated, a heartbreaking loss. 'By embracing AI and introducing world-first early warning systems, we'll spot dangerous signs sooner and launch rapid inspections before harm occurs.' Nurse Letby is serving 15 whole-life orders for murdering seven babies and attempting to kill seven more at the Countess of Chester Hospital. GP Shipman is thought to have killed more than 200 patients over two decades. He was convicted in 2000 and died in 2004. The technology, still in development, will flag safety issues in real time — allowing Care Quality Commission officials to investigate and take immediate action. Top NHS figure Prof Meghana Pandit said it would 'turbo-charge' the speed and efficiency of identifying patient concerns. It came as Mr Streeting last week ordered a national investigation into maternity services. Women and babies had been left at 'considerably higher' risk than what was necessary.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store