Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Open Medicine ,Vol 7 ,No 4(2013)




Open Medicine, Vol 7, No 4 (2013)
ANALYSIS AND COMMENT
Federal government food policy committees and the financial interests of the food sector
Norm Campbell, Kevin J Willis, Gavin Arthur, Bill Jeffery, Helen Lee Robertson, Diane L Lorenzetti
Norm Campbell, MD, is a Professor in the Departments of Medicine, Physiology and Pharmacology, and Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta. He was on the steering committee of and was a member of the Sodium Working Group of Health Canada, and is a member of the sodium subgroup of the Food Expert Advisory Committee of Health Canada. Kevin J. Willis, PhD, is Executive Director of the Canadian Stroke Network. He was a member of the Sodium Working Group of Health Canada and is a member of the sodium subgroup of the Food Expert Advisory Committee of Health Canada. Gavin Arthur, PhD, is a research consultant based in Courtenay, British Columbia. Bill Jeffery, LLB, is the National Coordinator of the Centre for Science in the Public Interest and a member of the Steering Committee of the Conflicts of Interest Coalition. Mr. Jeffrey was a member of the Sodium Working Group of Health Canada. Helen Lee Robertson, MLIS, is a librarian at the Health Sciences Library, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta. Diane L. Lorenzetti is a Research Librarian in the Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, and the Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, Alberta.
Competing interests: None declared. The opinions stated in this commentary are those of the authors and not of their employers or institutions.
Correspondence: Dr. Norm Campbell, 3280 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary AB T2N 4Z6; 403-210-7961; fax 403-210-9837
Chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs)—cancer and cardiovascular disease in particular—are major causes of death and disability. Physical inactivity, the widespread consumption of unhealthy food, the use of tobacco products, and excessive alcohol consumption are the leading domestic and global causes of NCDs.1 The report of the 2010 Global Burden of Disease study of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation ranked dietary factors* the highest among risk factors for both death and disability in Canada and throughout the world.1 In light of the global burden of disease attributable to dietary factors and the economic implications of diet-related disease, the World Health Organization recommends implementation of a variety of public health policies to facilitate healthy dietary choices.2
Although several countries are implementing substantial regulatory reforms and are closely monitoring industry compliance with healthy-food policies and the safety and health of their food supply, Canada is not. The United Kingdom has introduced restrictions on advertising unhealthy foods to children and is actively monitoring the sodium content of foods and the food industry’s compliance with policies to reduce sodium-containing additives.3 Other countries are developing regulatory limits on trans fats and sodium-containing additives,3 and Norway subsidizes healthy foods to make them more affordable. The Canadian federal and provincial governments’ approach to healthy-food policy is based largely on food industry volunteerism; this has been mostly ineffective.4
With more than $100 billion in annual sales, the food sector is one of the largest industries in Canada.5 Researchers and advocates have voiced their concern that the financial interests of the food sector may be constraining the government’s ability to develop and maintain healthy-food policies.4,6,7 Box 1 outlines some of the concerns that have been expressed recently in news media and scientific journals. The international Conflicts of Interest Coalition was formed in 2011 to advocate for safeguards against conflict of interest in the public policy development process, particularly in regard to the United Nations’ “Political Declaration of the High-level Meeting of the General Assembly on the Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases” and the World Health Organization’s “Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2013–2020.” The World Health Organization has stressed the importance of reinforcing conflict of interest safeguards in its own policy and program development process.
We examined relevant Health Canada web pages to determine the extent to which individuals and organizations with financial interests in the food sector are represented in federal food policy committees (Table 1). Of the 9 committees identified, the Expert Advisory Group on National Nutrition Pregnancy Guidelines and the Health Products and Food Branch Advisory Committee did not provide sufficient information on their websites to enable this evaluation. Two of the remaining 7 committees (the Natural Health Products Program Advisory Committee and the Food Guide Advisory Committee) did not provide information on their websites on the financial interests of their members (Table 2). In the remaining 5 committees, the percentage of members with reported direct or indirect financial interests in the food sector ranged from 38% to 77%, and in 3 committees 50% or more of the members reported financial interests (Table 2). Members with direct financial interests in the food industry constituted more than 30% of 3 committees, and 23% and 7% respectively of the remaining committees. Five of the 7 committees evaluated did not have publicly available minutes to allow for the potential impact of these financial interests to be assessed.
In addition, for 3 of the 7 committees, we were unable to locate documented policies and procedures that would have helped them to minimize commercial biases during the development of policy recommendations (e.g., precluding members from having input, veto power, or the ability to vote with respect to policies in which they had a financial interest). However, the strong presence of commercial interests, the lack of transparent formal safeguards to preclude commercially self-serving influences on policy-making, and the lack of public documentation with respect to the decision-making processes of these committees are indicative of an environment where commercial interests may have a negative impact on national food policy recommendations.
The use of independent external advisors can increase the rigour, credibility, and accountability of decisions made by Health Canada. However, these collaborations and consultations, designed to incorporate scientific evidence into the decision-making process, must be managed in a consistent and transparent way to assure the public that public policies and programs are not being steered by vested financial interests. The influence that the private sector has on the implementation of policies that support continued or increased profits and commercial growth has already been demonstrated within the realm of medical research, where industry-funded studies are more likely to publish positive results than non–industry funded studies.8 The quality and integrity of decisions made by government agencies that regulate food and nutrition are just as vulnerable to compromise if they give industry a privileged role. In medicine, managing conflict of interest remains a significant challenge and the subject of much debate, especially in relation to pharmaceutical treatments.9
Increasing government reliance on industry partnerships related to public health seems to have created an environment rich with conflicts of interest.10 Governments, therefore, must carefully examine how large food corporations and their trade associations contribute to NCD prevalence through the promotion of products that undermine health in the way that tobacco companies have long been acknowledged to do, and must evaluate the current role of these entities in influencing public policy.10
Our analysis is limited to information available on some federal government websites. We could not obtain more information from committee members nor disclose our personal observations as committee members because committee members are required to sign confidentiality agreements that preclude disclosure of committee deliberations. We also have not assessed other aspects of commercial interests such as those that can occur during meetings between commercial entities and politicians. Notably, federal politicians have spoken out on the importance of efforts to reduce dietary sodium. That said, a 147–122 vote in Parliament on 8 May 2013 defeated a bill to mandate the recommendations of the Sodium Working Group that were unanimously agreed to by representatives from industry, academia, civil society, and federal and provincial governments.11 The bill was defeated by 146 Conservative government MPs (and one other nay vote) despite extensive support from civil society (approximately 70 groups representing residents in nearly two-thirds of Canadian households and health professionals that treat virtually all Canadians†) and the Canadian public (about 80% support in multiple national surveys). In addition, despite public disclosure that the information provided by industry on food labels is not accurate, the federal government announced that it would no longer monitor the accuracy of labelling, but would, rather, rely on the public to detect and report inaccuracies in food labelling to food companies.12
Our investigation is a small step toward examining the influence of financial interests on healthy-food policy in Canada, and more research is needed to fully understand the issue. Further research could focus on the extent to which the Canadian food industry sponsors research and influences its outcome, and how the industry funds non-governmental organizations, political lobby groups, and policy-makers. The financial interests of elected officials before, during, and after their elected tenure should also be considered.
Government of Canada conflict of interest procedures and processes must be made transparent and accessible to all Canadians.13 Furthermore, it is important for the maintenance of public trust that Health Canada provide clear public records outlining how its conflict of interest rules or guidelines are, or are not, applied.
Table 1Table 1. Canadian federal government advisory food committees and their mandates [view]
Table 2Table 2. Declared interests of members of Canadian federal government advisory food committees [view]
Box 1Box 1. Reports in news media and scientific journals on actions and statements by the Canadian government that counter efforts to implement healthy-food policies [view]
Footnotes
*The dietary factors in order of importance for mortality in Canada are low fruit, low nuts and seeds, high sodium, high trans fat, low omega-3, low vegetables, high processed meats, low fibre, low whole grains, low polyunsaturated fatty acids, high sweetened beverages, low calcium, low milk, and high red meat.
†See joint statement of non-governmental organizations at: http://cspinet.org/canada/pdf/updated.c-460.jointstatement.pdf.
References
1.     Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. Global burden of disease study 2010. GBD arrow diagram, risks. Seattle (WA): The Institute; 2013. Available from: http://www.healthmetricsandevaluation.org/gbd/visualizations/gbd-arrow-diagram (accessed 2013 May 28).
2.     World Health Organization. WHO global strategy on diet, physical activity and health: a framework to monitor and evaluate implementation. Geneva: WHO Press; 2008. Available from: http://www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/M&E-ENG-09.pdf .
3.     World Health Organization. Global status report on noncommunicable diseases 2010. Geneva: WHO Press; 2011. Available from: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2011/9789240686458_eng.pdf.
4.     Moodie R, Stuckler D, Monteiro C, Sheron N, Neal B, Thamarangsi T, et al. Profits and pandemics: prevention of harmful effects of tobacco, alcohol, and ultra-processed food and drink industries. Lancet 2013;381(9867):670–679.
5.     Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. Significance of the food and beverage processing industry in Canada. Available from: http://www.agr.gc.ca/eng/industry-markets-and-trade/statistics-and-market-information/by-product-sector/processed-food-and-beverages/significance-of-the-food-and-beverage-processing-industry-in-canada/?id=1174563085690 (accessed 2013 Aug 8).
6.     PLoS Medicine Editors. PLoS Medicine series on Big Food: the food industry is ripe for scrutiny. PLoS Med 2012;9(6):e1001246.
7.     Freedhoff Y, Hebert PC. Partnerships between health organizations and the food industry risk derailing public health nutrition. CMAJ 2011;183(3):291–292.
8.     Lundh A, Sismondo S, Lexchin J, Busuioc OA, Bero L. Industry sponsorship and research outcome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2012 Dec 12;12:MR000033.
9.     Jørgensen AW, Hilden J, Gøtzsche PC. Cochrane reviews compared with industry supported meta-analyses and other meta-analyses of the same drugs: systematic review. BMJ 2006;333(7572):782.
10.                        Gilmore AB, Savell E, Collin J. Public health, corporations and the new responsibility deal: promoting partnerships with vectors of disease? J Public Health (Oxf) 2011;33(1):2–4.
11.                        Parliament of Canada. Bill C-460: An Act respecting the implementation of the Sodium Reduction Strategy for Canada. Available from: http://www.parl.gc.ca/LegisInfo/BillDetails.aspx?Language=E&Mode=1&billId=5806485 (accessed 2013 Aug 29).
12.                        Government of Canada. Budget 2013. Chapter 5: Responsible management to return to balanced budgets. Available from: http://www.budget.gc.ca/2012/plan/chap5-eng.html (accessed 2013 Nov 14).
13.                        Yeates N. Health Canada’s new standards on conflict of interest [letter]. CMAJ 2007;177(8):900.


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ISSN 1911-2092


Sunday, 3 November 2013

Body Acceptance - Obesity Thunder Bay-Promoting Education on Health Determinants

Body Acceptance - Obesity Thunder Bay-Promoting Education on Health Determinants

Mexico's soda lobby rejects blame for rising obesity - Obesity Thunder Bay-Promoting Education on Health Determinants

Mexico's soda lobby rejects blame for rising obesity - Obesity Thunder Bay-Promoting Education on Health Determinants

Salt Sugar Fat: NY Times Reporter Michael Moss on How the Food Giants Hooked America on Junk Food -


Michael Moss, author of Salt, Sugar, Fat, talks about how the food companies hooked us

Moss spoke with the Star about “crave-ability,” Wall Street and the taste of wet dog hair

The bliss formula is one of many insights in Salt, Sugar, Fat, the book by New York Times reporter Michael Moss.
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Tony Cenicola / The New York Times
The bliss formula is one of many insights in Salt, Sugar, Fat, the book by New York Times reporter Michael Moss.
“Bliss point” — that’s what food scientists call the perfect sugary sweetness in a product that’s calculated to send the consumer over the moon.
The bliss formula is one of many insights in Salt, Sugar, Fat, the book by New York Times reporter Michael Moss that looked inside the processed food industry to see how multinational companies hooked consumers on their products.
Moss, the keynote speaker at the Association of Local Public Health Agencies conference in Toronto on June 3, spoke with the Star about “crave-ability,” Wall Street and the taste of wet dog hair.
Q: Is processed food made to be addictive?
A: I use the A-word sparingly. There’s no word the industry hates more than addiction. They argue that there are technical thresholds that should bar you from comparing food to narcotics.
That said, their lingo for describing the allure of their food is every bit as revealing. They use words like “snack-ability,” “crave-ability” and “more-ishness.” The bottom line is that all their efforts go into making their products as alluring and attractive as possible. That ranges from the formulation — especially with salt, sugar and fat — and the advertising, marketing and packaging.
Q: The new Coca-Cola ad about obesity and watching calories recently launched in Canada. What’s behind that ad — concern about obesity or a push for their diet products?
A: It’s a reflection that soda sales have been declining for years. Hats off to Coca-Cola for talking about obesity publicly. But I defer to the nutrition experts. They say it’s fine to run ads talking about obesity, but Coca-Cola needs to look at its own marketing strategy. They want Coca-Cola to make meaningful changes to the way it markets its full sugar sodas around the world.
Q: Many food companies now offer healthier versions — low-fat, reduced-sodium. Aren’t they good alternatives?
A: That’s the point the companies make, that they offer choices. But the mainline products are sold strategically in the store and promoted more. It’s one thing to offer choice and another to encourage people to eat the better choices.
In the healthier versions, it’s a typical move to lower one ingredient and increase the other bad boys. A low-fat yogurt can have as much sugar as ice cream. A low-salt product can be loaded with calories from sugar and fat.
Q: We know too much salt, sugar and fat is bad. In your research, what surprised you the most?
A: That companies have known this for years, even as they continued to add heaps of salt, sugar and fat.
Second, the companies are more dependent on salt, sugar and fat than consumers are. These are miracle ingredients for them that do more than provide allure.
Thirdly, scientists and food executives don’t actually eat their own products, especially when they’ve run into health problems themselves.
Q: What do you mean by “do more than provide allure”?
A: Salt, for example, acts as a preservative. It’s an inexpensive way to provide flavour, in place of more expensive herbs and spices. And it can mask the bad flavour that creeps into processed food, especially reheated meat, which gives off what the industry calls warmed-over flavour, or WOF. A food scientist described it as the taste of wet dog hair.
Q: Ultimately, what will it take to get rid of unhealthy processed food? Federal regulations limiting sugar, salt and fat?
A: Consumers must be louder with their concerns. We’re at a tipping point. Concern is increasing for companies and/or government regulators to respond. Second, we need long-term education, the kind taught in home economics about how to shop, cook and be mindful of nutrition.
Q: You toured Nestlé’s cutting-edge food research lab in Switzerland, but left disappointed. Why?
A: I had unrealistic expectations because Nestlé has some 700 scientists hard at work. But Nestlé is a company in business to make money.
I ran into this dichotomy. The company that markets products like Hot Pockets, the microwaveable snack some people call the poster boy of the obesity crisis, is at the same time trying to engineer healthy products.
Bottom line, I don’t view the processed food industry as the evil empire that intentionally set out to make us obese or otherwise ill. They’re companies doing what companies do, selling as much product as possible to make money.
Q: The real culprit is Wall Street?
A: Many food executives say the ultimate 800-pound guerrilla is Wall Street. When a company tried to do the right thing by consumer health they faced enormous pressure from analysts and shareholders to keep revenues up. A former CEO of Philip Morris thought food companies might embrace regulations as a way to give them some cover from the pressures from Wall Street.
Q: The comparisons and tie-ins to the tobacco industry are fascinating.
A: I was so surprised to learn the history of Philip Morris. It became the largest food manufacturer in North America when it purchased General Foods and Kraft in the 1980s. In the late ’90s, it told its food companies they would face as great, if not greater, issues of public trust over salt, sugar, fat and obesity as it had over nicotine. It nudged food people to find ways to lessen dependence on salt, sugar, fat.
Q: But it didn’t work?
A: Kraft, to its credit, launched an anti-obesity campaign and did some amazing things, but other companies didn’t join in. It faced fierce competition.
Q: What’s your junk food weakness?
A: I crave potato chips. Potato chips have the holy trinity: salt, fat and sugar — the potato starch is converted to sugar. Yet now I know what goes into them and that’s empowering. When I find myself going for the second serving, I’m more able to control that.

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Sugary drinks tax could help tackle childhood obesity



Sugary drinks tax could help tackle childhood obesity
http://www.daynurseries.co.uk/article_photos/1561461.jpg
Date of article: 01-Nov-13
Article By: Julia Corbett, News Editor
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A study published in the British Medical Journal has claimed a 20 per cent tax on sugary drinks could help target and tackle obesity in young people.
The Children’s Food Trust has welcomed the call but highlighted the need for childcare providers and parents to install good habits in children early in their lives to prevent childhood obesity.
The charity’s nutritionist, Dr Patricia Mucavele, said: “Successive governments have shown they’re willing to take on and beat the tobacco companies, and to start tackling the nation’s alcohol problem.
“But as a country, our sugar habit is out of control and we’re passing this on to our children.
“Parents, childcare providers and schools have a huge role to play in getting kids into good habits on sugar early on, but for the sake of children’s health - and that of the public purse - we look forward to a day when government adopts an effective range of taxation, legislation, education and other integrated measures on this.
“A ring-fenced tax on sugary soft drinks would be a welcome step.”
In the study it was claimed taxation on sugary drinks could reduce the number of obese adults in the UK by 180,000 with the greatest impact seen in young people.
However the British Sugary Drinks Association has criticised the call and claimed the impact would not be as effective as claimed in the British Medical Journal.
Gavin Partington, BSDA director general, said: “There’s ample evidence to suggest that taxing soft drinks won’t curb obesity, not least because its causes are far more complex than this simplistic approach implies. Indeed the latest official guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence points to the need to look at overall diet and lifestyle. Trying to blame one set of products is misguided, particularly when they comprise a mere 2% of calories in the average diet.”