Interference in public health policy: examples of how the baby food industry uses tobacco industry tactics
Sabrina Ionata Granheim,Katrin Engelhardt,Patti Rundall,Stella Bialous,Alessandro Iellamo,Barrie Margetts +5 more
- 08 Dec 2017
Vol. 8, Iss: 2, pp 288-310
TL;DR: It is concluded that the baby food industry uses all six tactics: manoeuvring to hijack the political and legislative process; exaggerating economic importance of the industry; manipulating public opinion to gain appearance of respectability; fabricating support through front groups; discrediting proven science; and intimidating governments with litigation.
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Abstract: Despite countries' commitments to improve nutrition, starting with the protection of breastfeeding, aggressive marketing of breastmilk substitutes continues to promote their indiscriminate use. The baby food industry appears to use similar interference tactics as the tobacco industry to influence public health, promote their products and expand their markets.
Learning from the tobacco experience, this paper assesses whether the baby food industry uses any of the six tobacco industry interference tactics recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and summarizes examples of documented evidence.
We conclude that the baby food industry uses all six tactics: (1) manoeuvring to hijack the political and legislative process; (2) exaggerating economic importance of the industry; (3) manipulating public opinion to gain appearance of respectability; (4) fabricating support through front groups; (5) discrediting proven science; and (6) intimidating governments with litigation. There is abundant anecdotal evidence. Published evidence is limited and varies by tactic. Examples of interference are provided for the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos, Turkey, Ecuador, Hong Kong, Mexico and the United Kingdom, and most for Tactic 3.
Interference in public health policies shows commonalities between the two industries. The tobacco control movement offers a useful framework for classifying and addressing interference with public policy by the baby food industry. Revealing the depth and extent of interference used by the baby food industry is critical if countries are to counter interference and implement commitments to improve nutrition.
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