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United States Government Medicine

US Nutrition Panel's Ties To Top Food Giants Revealed In New Report 41

Tom Perkins writes via The Guardian: Almost half of a federal government panel that helps develop US nutritional guidelines has significant ties to big agriculture, ultra-processed food companies, pharmaceutical companies and other corporate organizations with a significant stake in the process's outcome. The revelation is part of a new report from US Right to Know, a government transparency group that looked for ties to corporate interests among the 20-member panel of food and nutrition experts that makes recommendations for updating the US government's official dietary guidelines.

It found nine members had ties to Nestle, Pfizer, Coca-Cola, the National Egg Board and other prominent food lobby groups, among others. The findings raise questions about whether the panel is looking out for Americans' health or corporate profits, and "erodes confidence in dietary guidelines," said Gary Ruskin of US Right to Know. "Millions of Americans' lives are affected by this report and it's crucial that the report tell the truth to American people and it's not degraded into another sales pitch for big food and big pharma," he said. [...]

"The guidelines affect the entire US food system quite strongly," Ruskin said. US Right to Know scoured public records dating back five years for conflicts of interest among the 20 panel members. In addition to the nine it found with "high-risk conflicts of interest" and connections to the food and drug industry, it found four more members who have possible conflicts of interest. It applauded the agencies for appointing seven members who did not appear to have any conflicts. At least four panelists have connections to at least two companies each among Abbott, Novo Nordisk, the National Dairy Council, Eli Lilly and Weight Watchers International. One panel member has received about $240,000 in grant funding from Eli Lilly.
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US Nutrition Panel's Ties To Top Food Giants Revealed In New Report

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  • I KNEW IT (Score:5, Funny)

    by NobleNobbler ( 9626406 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @10:15PM (#63907477)

    Something always seemed off about the Chocolate-Zoloft-Soda-Eggs food pyramid.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Eggs are enormously nutritious, and I'm not just saying that because I'm paid by Big Egg
      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        Except for the saturated fats in the yolk.

        • by UpnAtom ( 551727 )

          Even f you're overeating, your body can process around 20g of saturated fats per day with no ill effects.
          https://www.health.harvard.edu... [harvard.edu]

          Eggs are also the best source of choline by a mile.

        • Have you heard of Dr. Mary Enig? Her expert stance was Ancel Keys was wrong, it's not saturated fats but trans fats that are unhealthy. Big sugar paid scientists to blame fats and conveniently ignore sugar. The suggested maximum is 10 percent of calories as saturated fats. One study even suggests a minimum of 7 percent. The average American gets 11 percent. Saturated fats are not a major health concern for most people. Low vegetable (and fruit) is much more concerning when you look at hazard ratios, as
      • I will categorically state that eggs from CAFOs, which means the vast majority of them in countries that allow this, are harmful. All the products of CAFOs are harmful. For multiple independent reasons.

        It is possible (but not known for certain) that relatively humanely raised chickens might produce eggs that are semi-good for you. As a vegan I would still not eat them even if I could (very allergic, which is part of why I adopted a vegan diet long before the name "vegan" even existed). But given the cho

    • Have you had you five items of junk food today?
  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @10:16PM (#63907479)

    The government's recommendations are certainly better and healthier now than 50 years ago when I was in school.

    That said the best food would be made from ingredients not in a labelled can or package.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @10:33PM (#63907501)

    Because I'm gonna assume you'd have a hard time putting together a panel of mostly unemployed experts. Even pure academics get grants that come from companies.

    If you want to demonstrate an actual problem, show us specific positions taken by specific individuals on the panel, where it appears the position goes against the public interest.

    I mean, come on - would it make sense to complain that somebody on Cisco's or Google's payroll is serving on the IETF?

    • The analogy doesnâ€(TM)t really hold. IETF is there to promote cooperation between companies, so that their products can communicate. The interest of the companies is the same as the publicâ€(TM)s one in the field of activities of IETF.
      Perhaps public research should be founded by taxes, and not be disguised private research…
      • Perhaps public research should be founded by taxes, and not be disguised private research

        Would that be more or less socialistic than general health insurance?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I mean, come on - would it make sense to complain that somebody on Cisco's or Google's payroll is serving on the IETF?

      ... or that the chairmain of the FCC was previously the Associate General Counsel for Verizon Communications. I mean, there couldn't possibly be any conflict of interest situations there.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @11:08PM (#63907533)

    ... the jolly green giant was up to no good.

  • Blame Ancel Keys (Score:5, Informative)

    by labnet ( 457441 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @01:04AM (#63907651)

    Ancel Keys convinced government that fat made you fat, when in fact high carb and sugar make you fat.
    The food pyramid was born and is almost completely upside down, to the benefit of the sugar, corn, seed oil industries..

    You want to stay healthy:-
    - Intermittently Fast
    - Each meat, dairy, eggs, vegetables, nuts.
    - Stay away from seed oils, sugar, processed grains, fruit juice as much as possible.

    https://www.defeatdiabetes.com... [defeatdiabetes.com.au]
    https://www.npr.org/sections/t... [npr.org]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Food advice is like religion, everyone is convinced they know exactly what is best for you.

    • They also said sugar made you fat at the same time. CICO is likely closer to the truth of why there is an obesity epidemic, even if low carb diet is healthier. Most people were have been too poor to exist on a low carb diet historically, there was no massive switch to high carb. There was however a massive switch to adding liquid calories, no food pyramid had to include soda to make it happen.

      You want to stay looking healthy for as long as possible, go for early embalment. Nature is not kind, regardless of

      • Fame awaits anyone who wants to come to the sunny land of cheese, meat and wine and figure out why almost everyone is skinny. You'll only have to spend 5 years learning the insane language.

        It could be the lack of sugary desserts. The insulin spike of simple carbs seems to make me put on weight, but not if eaten outside of meal times.

  • The nutrition panel is just another example to tuck into the hat of US's late-stage capitalism: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Yes, it's another example of regulatory capture. For some reason that seems to be positively encouraged by both congress and the executive branch. (Party seems irrelevant, though the emphasis changes.)

  • by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @02:32AM (#63907731) Journal

    I can figure out on my own that eating chocolate bars and Doritos is probably not the best diet.

  • by alteran ( 70039 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @10:26AM (#63908051)

    These things are ALWAYS overpopulated by industry insiders.

As long as we're going to reinvent the wheel again, we might as well try making it round this time. - Mike Dennison

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