Food Industry Secrets


Secrets of the Food Industry

    By Adam Voiland

    With America's obesity problem among kids reaching crisis proportions, even junk food makers have started to claim they want to steer children toward more healthful choices.

    Such moves by the food industry may seem to be a step in the right direction, but ultimately makers of popular junk foods have an obligation to stockholders to encourage kids to eat more -- not less -- of the foods that fuel their profits, says David Ludwig, a pediatrician and the co-author of a commentary published in a recent Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Ludwig and article co-author Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition at New York University, spoke with U.S. News and highlighted 10 things that junk food makers don't want you to know about their products and how they promote them.

    David Rogowski, AOL

    1. Junk food makers spend billions advertising unhealthy foods to kids.

    According to the Federal Trade Commission, food makers spend some $1.6 billion annually to reach children through the traditional media as well the Internet, in-store advertising, and sweepstakes. An article published in 2006 in the Journal of Public Health Policy puts the number as high as $10 billion annually. Promotions often use cartoon characters or free giveaways to entice kids into the junk food fold. PepsiCo has pledged that it will advertise only its more healthful "Smart Spot" products to children under 12.

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    2. The studies that food producers support tend to minimize health concerns associated with their products.

    In fact, according to a review led by Ludwig of hundreds of studies that looked at the health effects of milk, juice, and soda, the likelihood of conclusions favorable to the industry was several times higher among industry-sponsored research than studies that received no industry funding. "If a study is funded by the industry, it may be closer to advertising than science," he says.

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    3. Junk food makers donate large sums of money to professional nutrition associations.

    The American Dietetic Association, for example, accepts money from companies such as Coca-Cola, which get access to decision makers in the food and nutrition marketplace via ADA events and programs, as this release explains. As Nestle notes in her blog and discusses at length in her book Food Politics, the group even distributes nutritional fact sheets that are directly sponsored by specific industry groups. This one, for example, which is sponsored by an industry group that promotes lamb, rather unsurprisingly touts the nutritional benefits of lamb. The ADA's reasoning: "These collaborations take place with the understanding that ADA does not support any program or message that does not correspond with ADA's science-based healthful-eating messages and positions," according to the group's president, dietitian Martin Yadrick. "In fact, we think it's important for us to be at the same table with food companies because of the positive influence that we can have on them."

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    4. More processing means more profits, but typically makes the food less healthy.

    Minimally processed foods such as fresh fruits and vegetables obviously aren't where food companies look for profits. The big bucks stem from turning government-subsidized commodity crops -- mainly corn, wheat, and soybeans -- into fast foods, snack foods, and beverages. High-profit products derived from these commodity crops are generally high in calories and low in nutritional value.

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    5. Less-processed foods are generally more satiating than their highly processed counterparts.

    Fresh apples have an abundance of fiber and nutrients that are lost when they are processed into applesauce. And the added sugar or other sweeteners increase the number of calories without necessarily making the applesauce any more filling. Apple juice, which is even more processed, has had almost all of the fiber and nutrients stripped out. This same stripping out of nutrients, says Ludwig, happens with highly refined white bread compared with stone-ground whole wheat bread.

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    6. Many supposedly healthy replacement foods are hardly healthier than the foods they replace.

    In 2006, for example, major beverage makers agreed to remove sugary sodas from school vending machines. But the industry mounted an intense lobbying effort that persuaded lawmakers to allow sports drinks and vitamin waters that-despite their slightly healthier reputations -- still can be packed with sugar and calories.

    Brian Hagiwara, jupiterimages

    7. A health claim on the label doesn't necessarily make a food healthy.

    Health claims such as "zero trans fats" or "contains whole wheat" may create the false impression that a product is healthy when it's not. While the claims may be true, a product is not going to benefit your kid's health if it's also loaded with salt and sugar or saturated fat, say, and lacks fiber or other nutrients. "These claims are calorie distracters," adds Nestle. "They make people forget about the calories." Dave DeCecco, a spokesperson for PepsiCo, counters that the intent of a labeling program such as Smart Spot is simply to help consumers pick a healthier choice within a category. "We're not trying to tell people that a bag of Doritos is healthier than asparagus. But, if you're buying chips, and you're busy, and you don't have a lot of time to read every part of the label, it's an easy way to make a smarter choice," he says.

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    8. Food industry pressure has made nutritional guidelines confusing.

    As Nestle explained in Food Politics, the food industry has a history of preferring scientific jargon to straight talk. As far back as 1977, public health officials attempted to include the advice "reduce consumption of meat" in an important report called Dietary Goals for the United States. The report's authors capitulated to intense pushback from the cattle industry and used this less-direct and more ambiguous advice: "Choose meats, poultry, and fish which will reduce saturated fat intake." Overall, says Nestle, the government has a hard time suggesting that people eat less of anything.

    Scott Olson, Getty Images

    9. The food industry funds front groups that fight antiobesity public health initiatives.

    Unless you follow politics closely, you wouldn't necessarily realize that a group with a name like the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) has anything to do with the food industry. In fact, Ludwig and Nestle point out, this group lobbies aggressively against obesity-related public health campaigns -- such as the one directed at removing junk food from schools-and is funded, according to the Center for Media and Democracy, primarily through donations from big food companies such as Coca-Cola, Cargill, Tyson Foods, and Wendy's.

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      Recent Comments

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      22 comments

      SWasGreat 08:12:28 AM Nov 04 2008

      Hay thair wingnutt wie dont yuo larn two spel?

      frmthegrav 07:40:47 PM Nov 02 2008

      these harmful foods are only hurting the ignorant people who dont seem to care anyway. nobody seems to notice... nobody seems to care... so let these people become what they eat: monosodium glutamated, corn syruped, sodium benzoated fried pork saturated fat, dipped in cheese blobs of crap.

      TorAndersen 07:33:41 PM Nov 02 2008

      it's less about work than it is about the food, if kids did more they could eat anything, anyone over their weight for their age (they could be 3 years old) should all be forced to pull weeds along the freeway.

      DrummerOfSummer 07:16:40 PM Nov 02 2008

      Hi, I think this is a load of bullsht. All perserved food is unhealthy and slightly radiated to improve the suppy for Americas growing demand. I drink healthy period, i use food for nutrition and nothing less. As a young student I learn to not be so pursuaded by advertisement (Flashy Obama ADs) and long 5 mineut commercials of smiles and xylophone bells. I look deep into the media and the food industry for the best for myself. I encourage all of you to do the same.

      WingNutZelots 07:00:27 PM Nov 02 2008

      Your personal freedoms infringe on others when you are obese you break my business furnituere, encroach in to my plane seat and run up medical bills due to glutony. We can not make every thing to accomidate 400 plus puonds for a few who choose such. Yeah I know some have gland/hormone causes but they are less than 5% of the morbidly obese. No one can get past you on isles when shopping, you endager the safety of other in times of emergencies needlessly. Why should it take 6 EMTs to transport you when everyone else takes 2 and the other 4 EMTs are helping others in need. Obesity is just slow sucide and selfish gluttony!

      WingNutZelots 06:48:07 PM Nov 02 2008

      Are people personally responsible yes, and especially parents who allow children to get obesem Yet these food companies are very shrude and maipulative!! They lnow how to get people addicted to foods and do testing on such. We have had Soda for 100 years about and only since the 80's when they started useing High Frutose Corn Surrop vs Cain Sugar did such become a prime cause of excess weight. Time to make the Global Corporate Entities to be more responsile honest and natural ingrediants. They are causeing a National Health and Financial toll on USA. Just as we regulate Petro, Cigs and guns so shuld food chemical additives.

      NighthawkCheese 06:27:49 PM Nov 02 2008

      I agree with you 100% Yankeeranger83. The parents need to stop giving into their kids. Don't buy junk food and let them play video games all day, for God's sake. The parents are the ones who need to start taking responsibility!You shouldn't be blaming the companies when YOU'RE the one giving food meant for adults (such as energy drinks) or food that's just plain bad to your kids.

      Yankeeranger83 06:00:03 PM Nov 02 2008

      Yeah...the companies are to blame. Sure. The companies come to people's houses in the middle of the night and replace all of the healthy foods people buy with junk food. That must be it. God, give me a break. Kids are getting fat because they never do anything but play video games! And it's the job of the parents to regulate what the kid eats. I used to work in a convienience store, and the amount of times I saw parents come in with kids under the age of ten whining and crying about energy drinks, only to have the parent buy them it to shut them up was astounding. Use your brain, people. Junk food is called junk food because it isn't healthy food! If it was healthy, it wouldn't be labeled JUNK FOOD!

      bucs41 05:43:24 PM Nov 02 2008

      The food industry is the devil and consumers are in no way responsible. This is the sentiment that leads to obesity! When its someone else' fault! If your kid is fat, hide the chocolate and feed him/her less.... Unfortunately, it starts with the fat ass parents.

      NonsoundFlux 05:34:36 PM Nov 02 2008

      It's common knowledge that junk food is bad for you.That's why it's called JUNK FOOD.If you're eating it, letting your kids eat it, or ultimately even paying attention to it's existence, then you're obviously a complete idiot and deserve your obesity, as well as the slow painful death that follows your lifetime of poor choices.Good riddance to the lazy morons of the world.

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