Tuesday, 3 February 2015

A Soda Tax Could Prevent 26,000 Deaths Each Year

http://www.ahealthblog.com/soda-tax-prevent-26000-deaths-year.html

A Soda Tax Could Prevent 26,000 Deaths Each Year

A team of researchers have looked at the impact of a nationwide soda tax on sugary beverages.
Each year, people in America consume 13.8 billion gallons of sports drinks, soda, sweet tea, fruit punch as well as other sweetened drinks, a mass intake of sugar that’s fueling increasing diabetes and obesity rates in the U. S. The quantity of sugar in a regular 22-oz sweet beverage is 17 teaspoons, which equates to an average sum of 70,000 calories which the average American citizen takes in each year in sweetened drinks.
The researchers estimate that putting a penny-per-ounce soda tax on sweetened drinks could prevent almost 8,000 strokes, 100,000 instances of heart disease, as well as 26,000 deaths each year.
The researchers also estimate that  240,000 instances of diabetes could be prevented each year. There are 25,800,000 Americans that have diabetes, 8.3 % of the U.S. population is affected

Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Philippines Considers Soda Tax

Philippines Considers Soda Tax

January 19, 2015 Taxation in Philippines
MANILA – Taxing soft drinks in the Philippines may help improve health in the country, especially among youths.
In a new position paper issued recently the Department of Health of the Philippines stated its opinion that a new tax should be implemented on the sale of all sugar-sweetened drinks sold in in the country.
According to the experts of the Department of Health, approximately 29.1 percent of men in the country suffered from hypertension, and 4 percent were diabetic, while 22.2 percent of women were hypertensive, and 5.5 percent were diabetic.
The unhealthy condition of such a significant portion of the population is caused by smoking, physical inactivity, excessive alcohol consumption, and poor diets.
Implementing a 10 percent tax on unhealthy beverages such as soft drinks, sweetened juices, energy drinks, and other sugar-added drinks should lower the consumption of such drinks.
It was noted that sedentary lifestyles is one of the biggest contributors to poor health and obesity among youths, and increasing the price on sugary drinks will help improve the diets of youths in the country.
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Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Media Messages Inspiring Eating Disorders



     At what point are we prepared to dissect the obesity war ?  This message  is unacceptable and I think we can do much better.  If you, the reader,are an advocate for community health and want to deconstruct the media message reagarding obesity I want to say Thank You.

Paul Murphy

@fat411   on Twitter

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Obesity needs to be tackled with a well thought out action plan.

Obesity needs to be tackled with a well thought out action plan
The organization obesitythunderbay.cais
fighting childhood obesity. We are addressing this through education, advocacy and awareness. Our group is in the building stage and we are most eager to seek out like-minded individuals and agencies in an effort to build possible partnerships. We want to build healthy food relationships.
Blaming only serves to confuse and confound the issue. Obesity is a community issue, and as such we will require a community initiative. The fault-based model serves to isolate the issue and, moreover, isolate the individual. When will we promote a conversation on obesity? We need to discuss all factors that are poisoning our young children and create an action plan based on support rather than fat hatred.
I have been walking all over this great city of Orillia wearing one very loud obesitythunderbay.caT-shirt and carrying another, one in white and the other in blue. Many citizens have stopped me on the street to discuss my efforts. All have been most supportive, and many more wave as they drive past. It is time we demanded a genuine transparent model to deal with this issue. Our focus will be on shared accountability and that includes all aspects of the food systems.
I want to welcome everyone to the website and I hope many express an interest in discussing a new obesity action plan.
Obesitythunderbay.cadoes not have a magic
slimming potion, nor do we have a product to sell. Please stop by the website where you can access countless videos on the complex issue of obesity.
Paul Murphy, www.obesitythunderbay.cahttp://www.orilliapacket.com/2009/09/21/letters-to-the-editor-5

Monday, 29 December 2014

Stigma Against Fat People the Last Acceptable Prejudice, Studies Find

Stigma Against Fat People the Last Acceptable Prejudice, Studies Find

PHOTO: Kenlie Tiggeman from New Orleans is suing Southwest Airlines for "discriminatory actions" after a gate agent told her she was "too fat to fly."
At a time when obesity is seen as a serious public health threat, research has found a growing prejudice against fat people.
Last week, the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University published a study suggesting that male jurors didn't administer blind justice when it came to plus-size female defendants.
Female jurors displayed no prejudice against fat defendants but men -- especially lean men -- were far more likely to slap a guilty verdict on an overweight woman and were quicker to label her a repeat offender with an "awareness of her crimes."
Another recent study by the Center for Creative Leadership found that top managers with a high body mass index were judged more harshly and seen as less effective than their slimmer colleagues by their peers, both at work and in interpersonal relationships.
Rebecca Puhl, one of the Yale researchers who co-wrote the juror study, said these displays of fat stigma are par for the course.
"Thinness has come to symbolize important values in our society, values such as discipline, hard work, ambition and willpower. If you're not thin, then you don't have them," she said.
Previous research by Puhl and her associates found that prejudice against fat people was pervasive and translated into inequities across broad areas of life.
Some examples: Fifty percent of doctors found that fat patients were "awkward, ugly, weak-willed and unlikely to comply with treatment" and 24 percent of nurses said they were repulsed by their obese patients. Nearly 30 percent of teachers said that becoming obese was "the worst thing that can happen to someone" – and more than 70 percent of obese people said they had been ridiculed about their weight by a family member.
Heavy-Duty Stereotypes
Kenlie Tiggeman, a political consultant who lives in New Orleans, said she's never needed a study to highlight hostility against fat people. As someone who has lost 120 pounds but has a 100 more to lose, she lives it.
Last year Tiggeman was thrown off a Southwest Airlines flight not once but twice because the carrier deemed her "too fat to fly." According to Tiggeman and witnesses, she was stopped at the gate both times by airline employees who proceeded to quiz her loudly about her weight and dress size before denying her boarding access.
Far from being an isolated incidence, Tiggeman said the experience was symptomatic of what she encounters every day.
"Just last week I was at the swimming pool in my gym when I overheard a woman on her cell tell a friend she was whale watching," Tiggeman said. "She was looking right at me. I know she was talking about me."
People have no qualms aiming such overt cruelty at obese people, Puhl said, because there are few consequences. She said that fat stigma is rarely challenged and often ignored. In effect, it's the last acceptable prejudice.
"There are no federal laws on the books that make it illegal to discriminate on the basis of body weight, so on the whole it remains legal. That sends a message that it's no big deal," said Puhl.
Puhl suspects that public health campaigns branding obesity as a disease are sometimes perceived as criticizing individuals rather than the environmental and social factors that lead to weight gain. This, she said, gives some people license to engage in public fat-shaming.
She also believes media portrayals of heavy people as fat, lazy and gluttonous do them no favors.
"Overweight people are usually shown in stereotypical ways -- engaged in out of control eating or bingeing on junk food -- and they are often shown as the target of humor or ridicule," she pointed out. "With the amount of media we all consume, it's no wonder these stereotypes stick."
Big Changes Needed
Puhl said because of the public's belief that obesity is a temporary condition completely under an individual's control, fat people didn't get much sympathy, even from others struggling with their own weight.
"For things to change there needs to be a greater understanding of how complex the condition is and how hard it is to reverse," she said.
Even as obesity rates continue to soar, Puhl hasn't seen much improvement in public perception except for a few glimmers of hope in the workplace and health care environment.
Tiggeman, for one, is fighting back. She's suing Southwest, not for monetary gain but to force the airline industry to address its policies regarding overweight passengers, she said.
"I have no problem being held to a standard, but I think that standard shouldn't be applied arbitrarily based on how an airline employee feels about my size," she said. "We need to know if we need one seat or two, because this eyeballing happening at the gate is incredibly discriminatory, and it's so unnecessary."
Tweet chat: Why Are We Fat and What Can We Do About It?
To raise public awareness about obesity prevention and treatment, Dr. Richard Besser, ABC News' chief health and medical correspondent, will host a one-hour "tweet chat" on Twitter today from 1-2 p.m. ET. To participate, sign into Twitter and click here for the hashtag. Follow the conversation or jump in with comments and questions of your own.
Medical experts from the American Council on Exercise, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, Center for Science in the Public Interest and Cornell University will join Besser on the chat to answer your questions and offer advice.

Friday, 19 December 2014

Half of Dr. Oz’s advice is baseless or wrong, Canadian researchers find


Half of Dr. Oz’s advice is baseless or wrong, Canadian researchers find

 

 Link to the BMJ Study:

http://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g7346 

Medical research doesn't back up — or flat-out contradicts — what the TV doctor says, study published in BMJ reports

Dr. Mehmet Oz, chairman and Professor of Surgery, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington in June about deceptive weight-loss products.
Lauren Victoria Burke / AP
Dr. Mehmet Oz, chairman and Professor of Surgery, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington in June about deceptive weight-loss products.
It’s not hard to understand what makes Dr. Oz so popular. Called “America’s doctor,” syndicated talk-show host Mehmet Oz speaks in a way anyone can understand. Medicine may be complex. But with Dr. Oz, clad in scrubs and crooning to millions of viewers about “miracles” and “revolutionary” breakthroughs, it’s often not.
He somehow makes it fun. And people can’t get enough.
“I haven’t seen a doctor in eight years,” The New Yorker quoted one viewer telling Oz. “I’m scared. You’re the only one I trust.”
But is that trust misplaced? Or has Oz, who often peddles miracle cures for weight loss and other maladies, mortgaged medical veracity for entertainment value?
These questions have hammered Oz for months. In June, he was hauled in front of the U.S. Congress, where Sen. Claire McCaskill told him he gave people false hope and criticized his segments as a “recipe for disaster.” Then last month, a study he widely trumpeted lauding coffee bean weight-loss pills was retracted despite Oz’s assertions it could “burn fat fast for anyone who wants to lose weight.”
And now, his work has come under even greater scrutiny in the British Medical Journal, which on Wednesday published a study analyzing Oz’s claims along with those made on another medical talk show.
What they found wasn’t reassuring.
The Canadian researchers, led by Christina Korownyk of the University of Alberta, charged medical research either didn’t substantiate — or flat out contradicted — more than half of Oz’s recommendations.
“Recommendations made on medical talk shows often lack adequate information on specific benefits or the magnitude of the effects of these benefits,” the article said. “The public should be skeptical about recommendations made on medical talk shows.”
Oz, for his part, said he’s only trying to give people all the options out there. He said data shouldn’t stop patients from testing out things like raspberry ketone — a “miracle in a bottle to burn your fat” — even if it’s never been tested on people, according to Slate.
“I recognize that oftentimes they don’t have the scientific muster to present as fact,” Oz said at a U.S. Senate hearing, adding that he “personally believes in the items I talk about in my show.
“But, nevertheless, I give my audience the advice I give my family all the time. I give my family these products, specifically the ones you mentioned. I’m comfortable with that part.”
But the Canadian researchers weren’t nearly so comfortable. They selected 40 episodes from last year, identifying 479 separate medical recommendations. After paging through the relevant medical research, they found evidence only supported 46 per cent of his recommendations, contradicted 15 per cent and wasn’t available for 39 per cent.
The study was not without its limitations, however. The researchers conceded it was difficult to parse “what was said and what was implied.” And some of the recommendations were extremely general — “sneezing into your elbow prevents the spread of germs” — and consequently difficult to find in medical research, let alone substantiate.
Still, the article was a withering assessment of Oz and the whole doctor talk show business.
“Consumers should be skeptical about any recommendations provided on television medical talk shows, as details are limited and only a third to one half of recommendations are based on believable or somewhat believable evidence,” the paper said.
“Decisions around health care issues are often challenging and require much more than non-specific recommendations based on little or no evidence.”
But Oz considers himself an iconoclast trying to shake up a stodgy medical community.
“Much of medicine is just plain old logic,” he told The New Yorker. “So I am out there trying to persuade people to be patients. And that often means telling them what the establishment doesn’t want to hear: that their answers are not only the answers, and their medicine is not the only medicine.”
The study is part of an ongoing debate about medicine on television.
There’s clearly a market for doctor talk shows. The Dr. Oz Show ranks in the top five talk shows in the United States, bringing in a haul of roughly 2.9 million viewers per day. And the talk show The Doctors, also studied in the paper, nets around 2.3 million viewers per show.
These days, Oz considers disease in terms of marketability. Cancer, he told The New Yorker, “is our Angelina Jolie. We could sell that show every day.”
But some doctors have expressed alarm at Oz’s willingness to sell it. “Although perhaps not as ‘sexy’ as Dr. Oz would like, the public needs more information about the effects of diet as a whole on cancer risk,” commented one paper titled “Reality Check: There is no such thing as a miracle food” in the journal Nutrition and Cancer. It lambasted Oz’s assertion that endive, red onion and sea bass can decrease the likelihood of ovarian cancer by 75 per cent.
“Mehmet is now an entertainer,” New York doctor Eric Rose told The New Yorker. “And he’s great at it. People learn a lot, and it can be meaningful in their lives.
But “sometimes Mehmet will entertain wacky ideas — particularly if they are wacky and have entertainment value.”


http://www.thestar.com/life/2014/12/19/half_of_dr_ozs_advice_is_baseless_or_wrong_canadian_researchers_find.html?app=noRedirect

Rudd Center Digest December 2014

December 2014

FRONT BURNER NEWS

School Meals Critical for Low Income Adolescents 

The fruits and vegetables provided through school meals deliver an important dietary boost to low income adolescents, according to a study released in Preventive Medicine. Read more.

Current U.S. Food Supply Not Healthy 

The food supply contains too much sodium, unhealthy fat, and added sugar and not enough fruits, vegetables, and whole grains for a healthy and balanced diet, according to a report published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Read more.

Children with Obesity More Responsive to Sugar 

The brains of children with obesity are more responsive to sugar, according to a recent study from the University of California, San Diego. Read more.

Congress Eases School Food Rules 

A massive year-end spending bill recently released by Congress will not allow schools to opt out of healthier school meal standards championed by the First Lady. It would, however, ease standards that many students and school officials complained about. Read more

Addressing Weight-Based Bullying 

There is a real need to ensure that weight-based bullying is addressed on par with other forms of bullying, according to Rebecca Puhl, PhD, Rudd Center’s Deputy Director. Read more

Sleep Problems Raise Obesity Risk in Adolescents 

Sleep deprivation and sleep-related breathing problems in adolescents significantly raise their risk for obesity. Read more

Mother’s Health Impacts Child’s Weight 

A mother's health before and during pregnancy can affect her child's weight, according to a paper recently published in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Read more

VOICES

2014 Was Watershed Year for Food Politics 

With so much progress made in food policy this year, 2014 might be viewed as the watershed year for food politics, asserts Dana Woldow, School Food Advocate. Read more.

Importance of a National Soda Tax 

A national soda tax is needed to reduce obesity and save lives, according to David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times Journalist. Read more.
SUGAR-SWEETENED BEVERAGES/TAXES

Mexico’s Soda Tax is Reducing Consumption 

Mexico's soda tax is changing sugary drink consumption habits, according to health advocates. "Taxation, just like it did for tobacco, is the most effective way to get people to change their behavior," according to Barry Popkin, Professor at the University of North Carolina. Read more.  

California City Proposes Healthy Drink Defaults for Kids’ Meals 

The city of Davis, California wants water and low-fat milk to be the standard beverage offered with children’s meals at restaurants. Parents would have to request soda. Read more.  

Berkeley Mayor Begins to Implement Soda Tax 

The city of Berkeley will establish a panel of experts in health, nutrition, and education-related fields to recommend how to spend the tax revenue. Read more.

Montreal City Council to Debate Soda Tax 

Montreal city councillor Marvin Rotrand is proposing to tax sugary drinks province-wide. Read more

FOOD MARKETING

CFBAI Releases Progress Report 

The Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative (CFBAI) recently released a progress report on their standards for marketing to kids. While there were no compliance issues in radio or print, the evaluation acknowledges that some companies did not live up to the commitments they made for TV and digital media advertising. Read more.

Rudd Center Welcomes New Year at the University of Connecticut 

UConn_Rudd Center
The Rudd Center will move to the University of Connecticut (UConn) next month. The Center will relocate to Constitution Plaza in Hartford.
The move is one of the first major initiatives of UConn’s Academic Vision, which prioritizes health and wellness research as an integral part of the University’s mission.
Center staff and faculty look forward to a successful new year and increased opportunities to collaborate with the UConn community.  

FDA Announces Menu Labeling Regulation

Menu_labeling

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) finalized regulations requiring chain restaurants and other retailers that sell prepared foods to put calorie labels on their menus and menu boards.

The new rules, which are part of the 2010 Affordable Care Act, establish a national standard for restaurant chains with 20 or more outlets. The rules pre-empt existing state laws.
Under the new regulation, calories must be displayed on all menus and menu boards. Other nutritional information, such as calories from fat, total fat, saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, sodium, total carbohydrates, fiber, sugars and protein, must be available in writing upon request.
"Research shows that Americans consume about one-third of their calories away from home,” said Marlene Schwartz, PhD, Rudd Center Director. “By providing calorie counts on menus and menu boards, consumers will have the information they need to make informed choices."
Restaurants and other food establishments will have one year to comply with the menu labeling requirements.
In addition, vending machine operators who own or operate 20 or more vending machines must disclose calorie information on their vending machines. They will have two years to comply with the requirements.
Health experts assert the new requirements will help address the obesity epidemic by showing Americans how many calories are in the meals they eat outside of the home.  

Children’s Health Advocates to Candy Makers: Stop Marketing Junk Food to Kids

Gummy_Bears
Members of the Food Marketing Workgroup, including the Rudd Center, are urging Tootsie Roll Industries, as well as four other candy manufacturers, to do their part to curb childhood obesity and stop marketing unhealthy foods to children and to participate in a self-regulatory program that monitors food advertising aimed at kids.
The nation’s three biggest candy companies, Hershey, Mars, and NestlĂ©, already belong to the Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative (CFBAI), which is administered by the Council of Better Business Bureaus. However, Tootsie Roll, as well as the American Licorice Company, Haribo of America, Perfetti Van Melle, and The Topps Company do not participate.

"Advertising products that promote diabetes, obesity, and tooth decay to impressionable toddlers watching My Little Pony and Strawberry Shortcake is completely outside the boundaries of responsible corporate behavior," said Center for Science in the Public Interest Nutrition Policy Director Margo G. Wootan, in a CSPI issued press release. "More responsible companies like Hershey, Mars, and NestlĂ© agreed long ago to not place ads in children’s programming, but Tootsie Roll Industries is years behind."
The CFBAI Initiative is a voluntary self-regulation program comprising many of the nation's largest food and beverage companies. The Initiative is designed to shift the mix of foods advertised to children under 12 to encourage healthier dietary choices and healthy lifestyles.

Consumer, Child Health, and Privacy Groups Urge FTC to Investigate Topps Company for Violating COPPA 

The Rudd Center recently signed onto a complaint, drafted by the Georgetown University Law Center and the Center for Digital Democracy (CDD), urging the Federal Trade Commission to investigate The Topps Company, Inc. (maker of Ring Pops) for various violations of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA).
According to the CDD, Topps uses its child-directed website Candymania.com and social media to promote Ring Pops, a candy that appeals to children. The #RockThatRock contest encouraged children to post photos of themselves wearing Ring Pops on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for a chance to have their photo used in a music video with tween band R5. Topps used several photos of children who were clearly under age.
The video is available on both Candymania and YouTube and has been viewed almost 900,000 times. Long after the contest ended, Topps continued to display children’s photos and contact information submitted using the #RockThatRock hashtag on the Ring Pop Facebook page.
The CDD asserts that Topps made no effort to provide notice to parents about the information collected, or to obtain advance, verifiable parental consent as required by the COPPA rule.
In addition, says the CDD, Topps violated the COPPA rule by failing to post its children’s privacy policy in a prominent manner, failing to provide a complete and understandable privacy policy, conditioning a child’s participation in the contest on disclosing more information than was reasonably necessary, and retaining children’s personal information for longer than reasonably necessary.  
New Report Ranks America’s Health
America's Health
Obesity and physical inactivity are the top health and health-related problems in the U.S., according to a new report from the United Health Foundation, the American Public Health Association, and Partnership for Prevention.
Now in its 25th year, the annual America's Health Rankings report is the nation's longest running, state-by-state snapshot of Americans’ health. According to the report, about one-third of U.S. adults said they were obese, and nearly a quarter said they had not participated in any physical activity or exercise within the past month.
The report also shows that the rate of type 2 diabetes has increased over time. Ten-percent of Americans now say they have the diet-related disease.
 
Yale_Rudd_Center