Second National Soda Summit Calls for Action to Limit Soda’s Harm

sodasummit

Last week, the National Soda Summit met in Washington, D.C. to consider national and local strategies to limit consumption of sugary beverages. The conference brought together national and international experts, public health professionals and local, state and national policymakers to explore a comprehensive set of topics, including:

 

  • The latest science on sugar drinks and health
  • Lessons learned from past and current soda tax battles
  • Other policies that help limit the consumption of sugar drinks including government procurement standards, warning labels and capping portion sizes

 

Here are a few reports from the Summit:

 

  • Staff from ChangeLab Solutions led a workshop on their Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Playbook. The guide provides 10 strategies for communities and states to consider, organized in a sequence that the organization has seen many places follow. In general, communities and states begin with public education campaigns and work their way up to restrictions on the availability of SSBs. It is important to remember, says ChangeLab Solutions, that no single policy will substantially reduce SSB consumption or radically improve health. A collection of strategies, such as those listed in the playbook, will create environments that promote health.
  • Writing after the Summit, Sally Greenberg from the National Consumer League makes the case for a national soda tax.
  • Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) addressed the second National Soda Summit via video, saying that a national soda excise tax would help address the serious damage sugar drinks are doing to our health.

South Africa Delays Ban on Alcohol Advertising

The Lancet reports that a plan to ban alcohol advertising that was approved by the South African Cabinet in 2013 but not yet released for public comment is now subject to a regulatory impact assessment that could delay implementation for months. The liquor industry is strongly opposed to the bill and has mobilized interest groups to challenge its merits. An advertising ban in South Africa could trigger bans in neighboring countries, thwarting the alcohol industry’s efforts to develop new markets targeting women, a group whose drinking rates are generally low in Africa.

New Guide to Mass Shootings in America

Mother Jones has gathered detailed data on three decades worth of cases of mass shooting in the United States and mapped them, including information on the shooters’ profiles, the types of weapons they used, and the number of victims they injured and killed. The analysis covers the cases from 1982 through 2012, and the map has been updated with cases through 2013. The report concludes that mass shooting are on the increase.

California Counties Sue Drug Makers for Sparking Painkiller Epidemic

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Fox News reports, overdoses of prescription opiod painkillers have more than tripled in the past 20 years, killing more than 15,500 people in the United States in 2009. In response to the epidemic, two of California’s largest counties have filed a civil suit against five of the world’s largest painkiller manufactures. Attorneys for Santa Clara and Orange counties filed a complaint, naming Actavis, Endo Health Solutions Inc., Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Purdue Pharma and Teva Pharmaceutical Industries’ Cephalon Inc. as defendants.

 

 

Wine and Spirits Getting Stronger, Setting Back Effort to Cut Illnesses and Death

The Guardian reports that wine and spirits are getting stronger in the United Kingdom, affecting government efforts to get the drinks industry to remove 1bn units of alcohol from high street stores. The average volume of alcohol in drinks edged up from 7.25% to 7.31% between 2011 and 2012, according to a little-noticed Department of Health report. Health ministers want the industry to remove 1bn units from supermarket and off-license shelves by the end of 2015 to help cut alcohol-related illnesses and deaths.

Corporate Accountability International Goes to Mickey D and Philip Morris Shareholder Meetings

Image from Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Image from Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Corporate Accountability International brought six powerful moms and health advocates to Chicago to call on the burger giant to stop spending billions on marketing to kids, co-opting athletes and targeting communities of color while paying poverty wages to their workers. As mom and community health advocate Rosa Perea said, “McDonald’s exploits the massive appeal of athletes like LeBron to target kids and make the brand seem healthier than it really is — yet communities like mine are left footing the bill.” Stories in the Chicago Tribune, the AP and CBS brought news of the event to millions of people, and put the burger giant under additional pressure to change its abusive ways. Read more

 

CAI has also launched a campaign to counter Philip Morris International’s Be Marlboro campaign,   the latest tactic employed by the corporation to hook kids on tobacco, the world’s No. 1 preventable cause of death. CAI teamed up with Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids to show up at PMI shareholders’ meeting where the activists made clear PMI can’t get away with   such abuses. During the meeting, thousands of CAI   members bombarded Leo Burnett, the ad agency in charge of the ad campaign, with emails and tweets taking the company to task. Read more…

GM’s $35 Million Fine a Downpayment on Fixing America’s Regulation

cross-posted from Talking Point Memo

The General Motors Chevy Cobalt. credit
The General Motors Chevy Cobalt. credit

“What GM did was break the law,” Anthony Foxx, the secretary of transportation, announced as a news conference on Friday. The National Highway Safety and Transportation Agency imposed a $35 million penalty on General Motors, the largest ever imposed on an automaker, for its failure to correct and its cover up of known defects in the ignition switch of the Cobalt, a problem that contributed to at least 13 deaths.

 

While the fine and the multiple continuing federal investigations of GM may deter future wrong doing, they risk closing the garage door after car has crashed. GM is not alone. Toyota and Ford both recently paid hefty fines for misleading the public and regulators or failing to recall defective vehicles.

 

Something is wrong — and the problem goes beyond cars. In January, Freedom Industries tanks spilled thousands of gallons of chemicals into West Virginia’s Elk River, an industrial chemical spill in the Elk River, contaminating the drinking water for 300,000 people and sickening hundreds. The spill came after Freedom had failed to carry out regulators’ recommendations made after previous spills. Last month, federal investigators concluded that the explosion at the West Fertilizer Company in Texas that last year killed 14 people and injured more than 200 was due to a lack of oversight and regulations at the local, state and federal levels.

 

Americans rely on health and safety regulations to ensure that the products we use – and the processes that make them – won’t kill us. But today America’s health and safety enforcers are weaker than they have been in decades.

 

Once, the United States led the world in protecting public health from corporate excess. Between 1960 and 1980, spurred by the environmental and consumer movements, 49 federal laws were passed that set rules for the health and environmental practices of nearly every industry. Majorities of the public and both parties supported these regulations. And these regulations saved lives. After NHTSA was created, the United States motor vehicle death rate per 100,000 fell from 25.9 in 1966 to 10.8 in 2012, although countries with stronger regulations saved even more lives.

 

Beginning in the late 1970s, however, corporate America launched a counter-offensive. Using President Ronald Reagan’s 1981 inaugural claim that “government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem,” corporate leaders began a systematic effort to roll back, underfund, and delay regulations. Corporations bankrolled advocacy campaigns that won support of lawmakers from both parties – advocacy campaigns that continue in 2014. It is this legacy that sowed the seeds for today’s regulatory failures in the auto, food, pharmaceutical and other industries.

 

What are the health consequences? Today chronic diseases and injuries are the nation’s leading causes of premature death and preventable illnesses and injuries. Three of every four health care dollars is spent treating chronic diseases. Injuries, especially those related to automobiles, firearms, and alcohol, are the leading causes of death for young people. The practices and products of the tobacco, food, alcohol, firearms and automobile industries are major contributors to the most common chronic conditions and injuries. The decisions the United States makes about regulation of these industries will determine whether we can reverse the growing burden of chronic diseases and injuries.

 

Three changes could help. First, all companies should have a duty to disclose what they know about the harmful effects of their products and executives who withhold such evidence should be subject to criminal penalties. Second, making false health claims (for example, claiming that sugary cereals with a few added vitamins are healthy) should be subject to sanctions that are tough enough to deter violations. Third, regulatory agencies should use the full scope of their existing powers to protect public health. This could include more forceful regulation of tobacco, more aggressive and timely analysis and investigation of consumer complaints about the safety of cars and trucks, and bigger penalties for drug or device makers who fail to report adverse events promptly.

 

Reform will not be easy. For four decades, corporate America has campaigned effectively to roll back health and safety rules. But unless citizens and health and consumer organizations push back, Americans will increasingly be guinea pigs for risky products.

 

Nicholas Freudenberg is Distinguished Professor of Public Health at City University of New York and author of Lethal But Legal: Corporations, Consumption and Protecting Public Health (Oxford University Press, 2014). He has written about corporations and health for Slate, Salon, the Guardian, the Daily Beast, the American Interest and numerous scientific journals and is a member of the Scholars Strategy Network.

 

 

Senators Target Ad Tax Deduction — This Time for the Children

Two U.S. senators are making a new attack on the long-targeted ad tax deduction, and this one goes squarely after the food and beverage industries, reports Advertising Age. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., have introduced a bill called the “Stop Subsidizing Childhood Obesity Act,” that would prohibit deductions of expenses from the advertising of foods and beverages of “poor nutritional quality” that are marketed to kids.

Pediatricians Take on the NRA Over Gun Safety

For the past three decades, writes The Daily Beast, the American Academy of Pediatrics has been an outspoken voice on the issue of gun control, a position that has landed it on the NRA’s (admittedly very long) list of enemies. For its part, the National Rifle Association (NRA) says pediatricians have no business talking about gun laws. Now, the AAP has started to focus on how to realistically reach parents in red states as well as blue—and to soften some of its language on gun control.

Guns by the Numbers

Gunshow
                   A gunshow in Houston, Texas. credit

As the United States continues to grapple with developing sensible gun policies, a few numbers illustrate the magnitude of the problems our nation faces.

Total Incidents of Gun Violence in United States since January 1, 2014 14,899
Total deaths 3,842
Total injuries 6,539
Total gun deaths between Newtown shooting and December 31, 2013:         12,042
% of firearms transfers that occur between private parties: 40
Number of federally licensed firearms dealers in US >50,000
% of firearm dealers not inspected within 5 years:                                              58
Number of firearms stolen from federally licensed dealers in 2012: 16,667
Firearms reported stolen or lost by other than dealers 173,000
Results of survey of federally licensed firearm retailers in 43 states                   % who favored five year prohibitions of purchasing a gun for:
Publicly displaying a firearm in a threatening manner 84.8
Possession of equipment for illegal drug use 80.7
Multiple DUI convictions 70.7
Assault & battery without lethal weapon or serious injury 67.4
           Resisting arrest 53.1
Number of personalized firearms commercially available in US:                             0
Public opinion on guns in 2013:% supporting background checks for all gun sales:
American public 89
Republicans 86
Guns owners 84
Members of National Rifle Association 74
Number of members of NRA 5 million
% of US adults belonging to NRA 2
Gun rights groups expenditures on lobbying to Congress 2013               $15,292,052
Gun rights groups contributions to Congress 1990 to 2014                                                                                           $26,691,884

Sources

Gun Violence Archive        

Open Secrets

Slate and@GunDeaths

Webster DW, Vernick JS, eds. Updated Evidence and Policy Development on Reducing Gun Violence in America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014. Available at: