The nutrition gap: Why India’s seniors need targeted supplements for healthy ageing
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. India is ageing faster than most people realise. By 2030, one in five Indians will be over 50 – this is a demographic shift with major implications for productivity, healthcare and quality of life.
But while longevity is increasing, “healthy longevity" is not keeping pace. National studies show widespread nutritional gaps among older adults despite better food availability. It’s not what seniors eat; it’s what their bodies can no longer use.
Ageing, as one needs to understand, changes nutrient absorption, quietly and under the radar. After 50, gastric acidity drops, gut motility slows, intestinal blood flow declines, and the liver becomes less efficient at processing nutrients. Even healthy seniors absorb some vitamins, minerals and bioactives at lower rates than younger adults.
This biological shift is now well-documented across studies from India’s Longitudinal Ageing Survey (LASI), ICMR reports and international geriatric research. And it explains an uncomfortable truth: eating right is necessary, but often no longer sufficient, after 50. India has seen a surge in supplements in the post-covid-19 era.
Some popular categories include multivitamins, B-complex, herbal extracts, anti-fatigue blends, and “memory boosters." While these are well-intentioned, these products may not serve the same purpose for people in their 50s and beyond that they do for younger cohorts. This is because most of these products rely on standard tablets and powders, assuming the body will absorb them the way it did at 25. Research however suggests otherwise.
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