Family doctors resign from
AAFP over Coke partnership
Yesterday,
20 family physicians in Contra Costa County, California, ripped up their
membership cards in the American Academy of Family Physicians in protest over
the AAFP’s
partnership with Coca-Cola.
The
director of the Contra Costa Department of Health Services, Dr. William Walker,
announced that he was resigning his 25-year membership in AAFP.  In his
statement, Dr. Walker said:
…I am appalled and ashamed of
this partnership between Coca-Cola and the American Academy of Family
Physicians. How can any organization that claims to promote public health join
forces with a company that promotes products that put our children at risk for
obesity, heart disease and early death.
…The AAFP
is supposed to be an organization that works to protect the health of children
not put them at risk. Their decision to take soda money is all the more
unconscionable because, unlike doctors in the 40s, they well know the negative
health impact of soda. There is no shortage of documentation that soda is a
major contributor to our nation’s obesity epidemic.
…Let me
be clear about something: as disappointed as I am with the American Academy of
Family Physicians for being duped into thinking that Coca Cola wants to help
promote health, the real problem here is our children are being put at risk.
Companies
like Coca Cola are polluting our communities with deceptive advertising
promoting products that put our children’s health at risk.
…as a
family practice doctor and the Health Officer for Contra Costa, I do have a
prescription for every parent, teacher, community leader and student:
Look
beyond the glitzy advertising that makes you think pouring liquid containing
sugar into your body is healthy. Read the label. Look at the ingredients. I’m
not suggesting that you boycott sugared drinks, but please make an informed
decision about what you are consuming.
I’m
calling on every city and neighborhood in our County to fight back against the
industry that pushes these harmful products. I ask the American Academy of
Family Physicians to end this unhealthy partnership and to join us in leading
this important campaign to take back the health of our residents and end the
obesity epidemic.
Strong
words, indeed.  I hope that the AAFP – and other health and nutrition
organizations that might consider food industry partnerships – pay close
attention to these words.
* The
event was covered in the Contra
Costa Times. The Health
Department’s website includes the press
release and also a video and podcast.
Addendum:
Dr.
Wendel Brunner, PhD, MD, Director of Public Health in the Contra Costa
Department of Health Services has given me permission to post excerpts from his
letter to a representative of the California Association of Family Physicians
who had asked for more information about the protest:
“The
epidemic of obesity is the greatest public health and clinical medicine issue
of our time, and will lead to untold disease, shortened life spans, and medical
cost. That epidemic took off rapidly in the 80’s. While genes and personal
choices do have an impact on obesity, only profound environmental changes could
lead to such a rapid development of the epidemic, and it will only be stopped
by policy development and environmental and norm change. We need to create an
environment that supports people in making good choices for themselves and
their families.
One of
the best choices families can make is to pretty much eliminate sweetened
beverages. And the soda industry doesn’t want that to happen, so they are
looking for credible groups who will say that drinking soda is OK for your
health. But you know all that already, which makes this even more frustrating.
I am an
old county doctor, but I still believe that physicians have a responsibility to
advocate for their patients and fight to protect their health, and to first of
all, do no harm. I am truly gratified to see that our younger physicians in
Contra Costa have those same values too. The responsibility of a physician to
their patient is a sacred trust; physicians should never sell out their
patients’ health and well-being for a price, not even one “in the mid six
figures”.
The AAFP
needs to change their policy and thereby begin to redeem themselves. In the
process, they would educate the country and do something valuable for the
nations health, as well as for their own integrity. If they do not, they will
continue an unfortunately long and sordid tradition of professionals and their
organizations forgetting their purpose and their ethics and putting their
narrow organizational financial interest above the interest of the public that
they serve. Resigning membership seems to be the most effective way for
physicians to provide a wake-up call to the AAFP, and at this point is the best
thing a physician could do to benefit the organization.We anticipate that there
will be more resignations as this story develops.
Everything
cannot be blamed on the environment or peer pressures or economic factors;
patients do have a personal responsibility to make good choices for their
health and the health of their families. But physicians have the personal
responsibility to make good choices too, and so do the professionals who work
for them.
The AAFP
and the individuals in it made a bad choice. They now have the responsibility
to fix it.”
http://www.foodpolitics.com/2009/10/family-doctors-resign-from-aafp-over-coke-partnership/ 

 
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