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Some degree of public regulation is necessary VoorArgument1 #351051 Some degree of public regulation is necessary to achieve public health targets on obesity – and this needs to be supported by standards set and monitored by public health expert committees to improve industry performance in the nutritional quality of food products and in marketing the products to children. | |
+Citaten (3) - CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Relationship between funding source and conclusion among nutrition-related scientific articles
Citerend uit: L. Lesser, C.B. Ebbeling, M. Goozner, D. Wypij, D.S. Ludwig Publication info: 2007 January, 9 Geciteerd door: David Price 1:51 PM 26 August 2014 GMT Citerank: (3) 351052Corporate interests are often in tension with public health interestSelf-regulatory measures often struggle to accomplish sufficient public health impact, as corporate financial interests are often in tension with the public health interest.13EF597B, 399591Some degree of public regulation is necessarySome degree of public regulation is necessary to achieve public health targets on obesity – and this needs to be supported by standards set and monitored by public health expert committees to improve industry performance in the nutritional quality of food products and in marketing the products to children.1198CE71, 399703Corporate interests are often in tension with public health interestSelf-regulatory measures often struggle to accomplish sufficient public health impact, as corporate financial interests are often in tension with the public health interest.13EF597B URL:
| Fragment- Background: Industrial support of biomedical research may bias scientific conclusions, as demonstrated by recent analyses of pharmaceutical studies. However, this issue has not been systematically examined in the area of nutrition research. The purpose of this study is to characterize financial sponsorship of scientific articles addressing the health effects of three commonly consumed beverages, and to determine how sponsorship affects published conclusions.
Conclusions" Industry funding of nutrition-related scientific articles may bias conclusions in favor of sponsors' products, with potentially significant implications for public health. |
Link[2] Big Food, Food Systems, and Global Health
Citerend uit: David Stuckler, Marion Nestle Publication info: 2012 June, 19 – PLOS Medicine, PLoS Med 9(6): e1001242. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001242 Geciteerd door: David Price 1:01 AM 9 January 2015 GMT
Citerank: (10) 351042Strategies of some companies are fuelling the obesity crisisSome companies and industries are fuelling the obesity crisis, through a variety of strategies that prioritise profitability and corporate brand value over public health, and, in the process, externalise significant costs.555CD992, 351043Public health interventions are often resistedEvidence suggests that, for example, some food and beverage companies are adopting similar tactics to those adopted earlier by the tobacco companies to avoid public health interventions (such as taxation and regulation) that might threaten their profits.555CD992, 351336Insufficient countervailing checks to oligopoly in food supply chainsThe majority of what most people eat is driven increasingly by the production and distribution decisions of a few multinational food companies, whose oligopolistic interest are not necessarily aligned with the public health interest. Successive governments have failed to establish sufficient countervailing public policy measures to ensure that, where these interests are not aligned, the oligopolistic interests of the companies don't impact negatively on public health.555CD992, 368179Production and marketing choices favour profit over diet optimisationDecisions made by many food and beverage companies tend to be shaped more by the immediate corporate financial interests of shareholders (and the associated interests of corporate officers) rather than the social goal of achieving optimal human diets; as reflected in, for example, the production and marketing a high volume of low-cost, highly processed foods that are rich in sugar, salt, and saturated fats.555CD992, 368180Resisting public health interventionsEvidence suggests that some food and beverage companies are adopting similar tactics to those adopted earlier by the tobacco companies to avoid public health interventions (such as taxation and regulation) that might threaten their profits.555CD992, 399591Some degree of public regulation is necessarySome degree of public regulation is necessary to achieve public health targets on obesity – and this needs to be supported by standards set and monitored by public health expert committees to improve industry performance in the nutritional quality of food products and in marketing the products to children.1198CE71, 399888Strategies of some companies are fuelling the obesity crisisSome companies and industries are fuelling the obesity crisis, through a variety of strategies that prioritise profitability and corporate brand value over public health, and, in the process, externalise significant costs.555CD992, 399894Public health interventions are often resistedEvidence suggests that, for example, some food and beverage companies are adopting similar tactics to those adopted earlier by the tobacco companies to avoid public health interventions (such as taxation and regulation) that might threaten their profits.555CD992, 399895Production and marketing choices favour profit over diet optimisationDecisions made by many food and beverage companies tend to be shaped more by the immediate corporate financial interests of shareholders (and the associated interests of corporate officers) rather than the social goal of achieving optimal human diets; as reflected in, for example, the production and marketing a high volume of low-cost, highly processed foods that are rich in sugar, salt, and saturated fats.555CD992, 399901Insufficient countervailing checks to oligopoly in food supply chainsThe majority of what most people eat is driven increasingly by the production and distribution decisions of a few multinational food companies, whose oligopolistic interest are not necessarily aligned with the public health interest. Successive governments have failed to establish sufficient countervailing public policy measures to ensure that, where these interests are not aligned, the oligopolistic interests of the companies don't impact negatively on public health.555CD992 URL:
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