PHA-Exchange> U.S. ad industry tries to ward off obesity outcry

Tawnia Queen tawnia at hesperian.org
Fri Jun 4 10:21:54 PDT 2004


Nutrition and Health related it's interesting to note how many of these 
large transnational and other giant food corporations are also giving large 
sums of money to the republican campaign to re-elect Bush.

>Reuters
>U.S. ad industry tries to ward off obesity outcry
>Wednesday June 2, 12:01 am ET
>By Michele Gershberg
>
>NEW YORK, June 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. advertising industry is making a 
>concerted defense against public calls for tighter government restrictions 
>on food marketing in light of a growing American obesity epidemic.
>
>A nearly 90-page white paper released on Wednesday by the National 
>Advertising Review Council (NARC) argues that the industry's 
>self-regulation over three decades have resolved the bulk of questionable 
>food and health claims in advertising and should remain the main mechanism 
>for such disputes.
>
>It documents NARC decisions selected from over 900 cases, from breakfast 
>cereals touting enhanced strength to Kentucky Fried Chicken's recently 
>discontinued ads that implied eating fried chicken was healthy and a good 
>way to lose weight.
>
>James Guthrie, NARC President and Chief Executive, said the white paper 
>was the first of its kind to address advertising concerns for a single 
>category.
>
>"If a lack of confidence in advertising provokes unnecessary restrictions 
>on information available to consumers, then both producers and consumers 
>will lose," Guthrie told Reuters. "But there shouldn't be any need for 
>that. We believe the government hopes and expects advertising can be part 
>of the solution."
>
>NARC sent its white paper last Friday to officials at the Federal Trade 
>Commission, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of 
>Health and Human Services, among others. Officials were not immediately 
>available for comment.
>
>Consumer lobby groups and other critics argue that shrewd and costly 
>marketing have influenced U.S. eating habits and contributed to a rising 
>rate of obesity and related deaths, along with overeating and a decline in 
>physical exercise.
>
>Nearly 15 percent of U.S. children and adolescents are considered 
>overweight. The figure including adults jumps to nearly two-thirds of the 
>general population.
>
>In a sign of their concern at growing public scrutiny, top U.S. foodmakers 
>and restaurant chains, from McDonald's Corp 
>(NYSE:<http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040602/http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=mcd>MCD 
>- <http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040602/http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=mcd>News) 
>to Kraft Foods Inc 
>(NYSE:<http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040602/http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=kft>KFT 
>- 
><http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040602/http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=kft>News), 
>have been changing they way they serve up meals and reformulating the 
>nutritional contents of some foods.
>
>But some activists say the government should bar certain advertisers from 
>marketing food to children at all based on the high calorie or fat content 
>of their products, or if the vast majority of what they sell is unhealthy.
>
>"Case-by-case enforcement doesn't address the kind of foods that are 
>marketed to kids or the fact that marketing to children works to change 
>their preferences," said Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the 
>Center for Science in the Public Interest.
>
>"You see commercials for sugary cereals, McDonalds and soda pop," she 
>said. "You don't see ads for broccoli and strawberries and grapes."
>
>The NARC is a self-regulatory group backed by trade associations including 
>the Council of Better Business Bureaus, the American Association of 
>Advertising Agencies and the Association of National Advertisers.
>
>Founded in 1971, the organization has weathered efforts to ban 
>advertisements to children under the age of 8 in the late 1970s. Its 
>Children's Advertising Review Unit monitors ads for children under 12 and 
>claims to have a 95 percent success rate in resolving inappropriate marketing.



30,000 children will die in the next 24 hours from preventable diseases.
Click www.TheMillionSignatureCampaign.org , to join a campaign that demands
HEALTH FOR ALL NOW !
----------

Tawnia Queen
International Publications Associate
Hesperian Foundation -- Publishing for Community Health and Empowerment
1919 Addison Street, #304
Berkeley, CA 94704 USA
Phone: 510-845-1447, ext. 219   Fax: 510-845-9141
E-mail: tawnia at hesperian.org    http://www.hesperian.org
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