Food giants are going to enormous lengths to obfuscate US governmenthealth messages on healthy eating, according to a recent symposiumheld in Washington, DC, by a consumer advocacy group, the Centerfor Science in the Public Interest, on how corporations seekto
influence science and science policy.
"Food is big business, $1.3 trillion [£0.8 trillion; 1.2 trillion] in
revenue yearly," said Dr Marion Nestle from thedepartment of food
and nutrition studies, New York University."It supplies an average
of 3900 kilocalories [16.3MJ] daily[the recommended daily intake is
2200-2500 kilocalories a day],and the food industry will do
everything to make sure thatno regulatory agency and no nutritionist
ever suggests eating less."
Doing something about obesity means getting people to eat less,
said Dr Nestle. "But to get people to eat less, one has toexplain
what that means and what they should eat less of,"she said
She argued that, as a result of pressure from food companies,the
US dietary recommendations use euphemisms that cloud thismessage.
She said that they talk about "healthy weight"; they say "bemore
active" and "choose." They say "moderate" when what theyreally mean
is "eat less"but they don't say so, shesaid, adding, "No government
statement tells people to eatless."
Dr Nestle cited examples. One was a recommendation to decrease
meat consumption. The meat producers objected so the statementwas
replaced with the phrase, "choose meats, poultry and fishwhich will
reduce saturated fat intake." Another was a callto reduce sugar
intake. Under pressure from the sugar industryit was changed to
"choose beverages and foods that limit yourintake of sugar." Then it
was further modified to "choose beveragesand foods to moderate your
intake of sugar."
"The difference between "limit" and "moderate" may not seemvery
important, but it's an indication of the extremes to whichlobbyists
will go to make sure nobody eats less," said Dr Nestle.
The symposium was part of a project that the Center for Sciencein
the Public Interest is sponsoring"Clean Science inRegulation." The
project is exploring the proper relation betweenan independent
scientific community and the business community.
"Science can benefit from the business community's dollars and
ideas. On the other hand, excessive business influence canundermine
scientific rigour and credibility," said MichaelJacobson, the
centre's executive director.
The ultimate goal of the symposium was to seek ways to ensurethat
regulatory agencies get reliable scientific informationand advice
when implementing health, safety, and environmentallaws. It wants to
prevent regulated industries from attackingand discrediting valid
scientific information and to examineissues, such as bias in
advisory committee membership, as wellas conflicts of interest in
the sponsorship of scientific studiesused in product regulation.
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