Is the food industry still calling the shots in formulating healthy eating regulations?

Blog: Enlightened Eater – Rosie Schwarts, RD

Consulting Dietitian and Writer, Rosie Schwartz addresses the troubling industry involvement in the Health Eating Strategy and the federal government’s responsiveness to their tactics.  Read here… 


Sample tweet: Retweet Dietitians of Canada

How the Food Industry Uses Big Tobacco Tactics to Manipulate the Public

Eater

Leaked documents have revealed companies like Coca-Cola suppress science to shape public opinion. Read here... 

The Big Squeeze: Inside the fight over juice in Canada’s Food Guide

Great investigative article by Ann Hui exposing Big Food/Big Juice’s lobby tactics and efforts to propagate industry-funded research to justify juice within the Canadian Food Guide and broader Healthy Eating Strategy. 

Quote from Dr. David Hammond: “I would say [the juice industry] is acting equally as forcefully as tobacco companies to protect their interests”. 

Sample Tweet: Retweet Nick Saul  | Retweet Heart & Stroke

Judge Gives Green Light to Class Action Against McDonald’s in Quebec 

Montreal Gazette

The class-action lawsuit against McDonald’s has received a preliminary authorization to allow the lawsuit to be filed on behalf of a group, or class. Dating back to November 2013, anyone who purchased a toy or Happy Meal in Quebec with a child under 13 (who was present for the purchase) are now part of the suit. The suit is also seeking reimbursement for the cost of toys purchased, as well as punitive damages. Read article here… 

Sample Tweet: Judge rules go ahead on class action lawsuit in #Quebec against McDonald’s Canada arguing that Happy Meals and their accompanying toys illegally advertise to children can go ahead #Marketing2Kids

Child rights: the right approach for governments to protect children from harmful marketing

Summary of a UN General Assembly High-level Meeting on NCDs on 27 September 2018, where governments agreed to address non-communicable diseases (NCD) with “robust laws and fiscal measures.” The UN meeting concluded with a Political Declaration that took a right-base approach to childhood obesity and NCD prevention.  Read here… 

Sample Tweet: Retweet NCD Child

Happy Meal: Lawsuit

CTV Montreal

McDonald’s is the subject of a class action lawsuit. The lawsuit claims that McDonald’s marketing to children violates Quebec’s Consumer Protection Laws. Segment includes interview with Coalition member, Corinne Voyer, Director of Coalition Poids.

Additional Coverage: Huffington Post

Big ideas or Big Food? It’s time for Canada’s Healthy Eating Strategy.

A great OpEd by Food Secure Canada on the importance of the Healthy Eating Strategy; but, what’s the hold up?

Excerpt: “As we wait for the promised Food Policy for Canada, the government must decide if it will implement some Big Ideas in the public interest, or if it will allow Big Food to hold the rest of us back.” Read more here…

Sample Tweet: @FoodSecureCA “…better food policy is about more than the market. We need government to firmly act in the public interest and implement some bold new ideas.” #BillS228 #Marketing2Kids https://ipolitics.ca/2018/11/05/big-ideas-or-big-food-its-time-for-canadas-healthy-eating-strategy/

Junk Food Marketing to Kids

CTV Winnipeg

  • Great interview with Amanda Nash, a registered Dietitian with the Heart & Stroke.

  • Highlights the frequency and impact of unhealthy food and beverage marketing to children, recent research by Monique Potvin Kent (shared last week), as well as the importance of Bill S-228 and the Healthy Eating Strategy.

  • Sample Tweet: Retweet Heart & Stroke: https://twitter.com/TheHSF/status/1059562046063288320

More than music: Raffi brings his dedication to children to Sacramento

Sacramento Bee

  • Raffi featured in The Sacramento Bee discussing respecting young children and not exploiting their inability to understand marketing tactics

  • In recent years, Raffi has turned down “a movie deal, TV shows and commercial endorsements after learning they would be directly marketed at children”

  • Read full article here

Sample Tweet: .@Raffi_RC “[children are] not old enough to understand what they’re being pitched,” he said. “If you respect young children — if you respect anyone — you don’t exploit them”. Stop #Marketing2Kids #BillS228

Your Kid’s Apps Are Crammed With Ads

New York Times 

  • A new study by Dr. Jenny Radesky, assistant professor of developmental behavioral pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School, found advertising present in almost all of the most downloaded apps for children ages five and younger, many of which appear to violate the F.T.C. rules regarding unfair and deceptive advertising.
  • “In apps marketed for children 5 and under in the Google Play store, there were pop-up ads with disturbing imagery. There were ads that no child could reasonably be expected to close out of, and which, when triggered, would send a player into more ads. Dancing treasure chests would give young players points for watching video ads, potentially endlessly. The vast majority of ads were not marked at all. Characters in children’s games gently pressured the kids to make purchases, a practice known as host-selling, banned in children’s TV programs in 1974 by the Federal Trade Commission. At other times an onscreen character would cry if the child did not buy something.”
  • “To accompany the publication of the study, called “Advertising in Young Children’s Apps: A Content Analysis”, more than a dozen media and children’s health advocacy organizations sent the F.T.C. a letter asking for an investigation.” They argue that the advertising tactics described in the study “violate Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, which bans unfair and deceptive business practices.”
  • “The tide has turned… You can feel it. A few years ago to suggest limiting tech for kids would have sounded alarmist, and now that’s changing. It’s unfair to children and deceptive the way the ads are structured into the play” – Dr. Montgomery, a professor of Communications at American University)
  • “The hardest argument to make when you live in the U.S. is that children’s rights should be higher than the rights of advertisers”
  • Many of the apps looked at in the study were free apps.
  • The authors argue that the “bombardment of advertising undercuts most of the educational content an app may include.”
  • Dr. Jenny Radesky, the study’s author, “hopes the study will lead parents to ask more questions about the games their kids are playing. And she hopes it leads to regulation, though she suspects that will be a harder battle.”

Read full New York Times article here: Your Kid’s Apps Are Crammed With Ads