Title: Choice and healthy eating
1 Choice and healthy eating
- Geof Rayner PhD FFPH
- Visiting Research Fellow
- City University
- GR Associates public health consultancy
- Geof_at_GRAssociates.net
2This presentation
- Asks why making healthy choices is so difficult
when society is richer than ever before. Suggests
that food problems are not just about food. - Proposes that consumer marketplace leads to
paradoxes of food choice - Says that obesity is the visible indictor of a
general social problem made into a medical
problem - Examines what has been called by Popkin the
Nutrition Transition one of the best
explanatory models of what is happening to diet
and nutrition - Considers briefly - the strategy developed in
the white paper - Examines what could be done in the public sector
right now .
3Why is making healthy choices so difficult?
4Why are Ben and Jerrys icecream, ciggies, booze,
chocolate, etc so difficult to resist?
5Why are we producing fewer apples? Why are they
expensive?
6Question How do you attract the attention of
someone with a weight problem?
7The Obesity crisis.. For cats
8Inserting brands into the minds of children
9The power of brands
10Linking one brand to another
11Linking one brand to another
12The Hastings Report (FSA)
- there is a lot of food advertising to children
- the advertised diet is less healthy than the
recommended one - children enjoy and engage with food promotion
- food promotion is having an effect, particularly
on childrens preferences, purchase behaviour and
consumption - this effect is independent of other factors and
operates at both a brand and category level.
13Ads the public view
14Ofcoms view
- Ofcoms view is that it does not believe a total
ban on food advertising to children would be
proportionate or effective. - But evidence points the need to do something..
15Can we really choose?
- .. There may be no sharp line between behaviour
that is a matter of free choice that implies
personal responsibility for the consequences and
behaviour or outcomes that are due to inherent
qualities over which the individual has no
control. - Jeff Strnad, Conceptualizing the Fat Tax The
Role of Food Taxes in Developed Economies,
Stanford Law School, July 2004
16Food paradoxes
- Enormous subsidy for food production/ no
assessment of subsidies in terms of health impact - Massive choice of the unhealthy foods/ Too
little choice of the healthy foods, particularly
for some of us - High consumption on ready prepared foods/ Too
little (domestic) production and consumption of
fresh foods - Massive propaganda for unhealthy foods/ Limited
promotion of healthier range of foods or healthy
food cultures
17Paradoxes of our food choices .. A little list
- Unhealthy foods are cheap/Healthy foods not cheap
enough - Too many cooks on television/ Not enough cooks in
the home - Food industry informs about diet and fitness (FDF
Manifesto) /less eager to change products or
marketing - Lots of talk around healthy diet for children
(improving school meals)/Less action to create a
healthy diet for children or protect children
from food chain - Public sector major purchaser of, and setting
for, food/ limited awareness as promoter of
healthy food/healthy choices - Citizens are referred to as choosers or
consumers/ we are not referred to as producers
of health
18Why are cheap calories so difficult to resist?
- Effectiveness of advertising/marketing
- Pervasiveness of snacking opportunities go to
any WHS on any mainline station - Bounded rationality based on incomplete
information - Cognitive errors linked to intertemporal choice
- Income energy dense foods are cheap
- Opportunity they are everywhere
- Power consumerism is felt to be an expression
of our personal power
19-
- The triumph of advertising in the culture
industry is that consumers feel compelled to buy
and use its products even though they see through
them. -
- Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer. Dialetic of
the Enlightenment (1944)
20US and worldwide ad spend
Universal McCann 2004
21Obesity converting social and economic trends
into medical problems
22Weight gain a simple descriptive model
23Obesity rising across OECD countries but
centred so far on Americas and Europe
24Over consumption (USA) and underconsumption (LDCs)
- Average US adult male consumes 154 of RDA for
protein (97gms vs RDA of 63) - Average US adult female consumes 127
- Average American derives 67 of protein from
animal sources compared to 34 worldwide - WHO estimates more than 230 million (40) of LDC
children are stunted - WHO also suggests that obesogenic factors in
developed countries are taking root globally,
even in LDCs
25Impact in USA
- Forty-year-old female nonsmokers lost 3.3
years and 40-year-old male nonsmokers lost 3.1
years of life expectancy because of overweight.
Forty-year-old female nonsmokers lost 7.1 years
and 40-year-old male nonsmokers lost 5.8 years
because of obesity. When linked with another
serious disease precursor, cigarette smoking,
years of lost life doubled. Obese female smokers
lost 13.3 years and obese male smokers lost 13.7
years compared with normal-weight nonsmokers.
Peeters, A., et al., Obesity in Adulthood and Its
Consequences for Life Expectancy A Life-Table
Analysis. Ann Intern Med, 2003. 138(1) p. 24-32.
26But .. obesity is not an inevitable result of
economic growth
Worlds five largest economies
11999 data 2 2001 data 3 2000 data
27But.. We appear to be following America
28The Nutrition Transition
29A snapshot of the nutrition transition.. fast
foods vs pre-agrarian diet
Trenton G. Smith, Ph.D. University of Bonn, June
2003
30Explanation for national/subnational differences
found in differential impact of obesogenic
drivers
- Economic transitions
- Dietary transitions
- Lifestyle and cultural transitions.
- Overlapping to form the Nutrition Transition
(Popkin) - Plus - genetic, social class, employment, ethnic,
and age-related vulnerabilities
31Nutrition Transition
- Shift from domestic food production and
preparation to industrialised food production,
preparation and distribution - Food overproduction and falling commodity prices
- High levels of food sector subsidy (US and EU)
- Emergence of strong international brands among
obesogenic foods/drinks biggest world brand
is a carbonated sugary drink
32Nutrition Transition
- Emergence of international brands biggest world
brand is a carbonated sugary drink - Time poor domestic economy linked to
outsourcing of domestic food preparation - Physically active occupations replaced by
sedentary occupations - Sport recomposed as entertainment via
commercialisation and linked to food marketing
33Nutrition Transition
- Marketing focused on energy dense foods which
have limited satiation but are high in calories
(eg Snickers bar has more calories than a meal of
steak and vegetables) - Time poor domestic economy linked to
outsourcing of domestic food preparation - Physically active occupations replaced by
sedentary occupations - Sport recomposed as entertainment via
commercialisation and linked to food marketing
34European food subsidies
- Over production of some foods
- Production of less healthy or dangerous products
- Underproduction of healthier range of products
35A key element of the Transition the cheapening
of fat and sugar
- In 2000, the CAP spent 32.6 billion in
production subsidies, equal to just under half
the entire EU budget - CAP results in over production of less healthy
food constituents examples being sugar and fat - Underproduction - and underconsumption - of
healthier range of products which receive no
subsidy (e.g. apples). 60 of Euro FV imported - In 2000 food share of EU household budget 15
compared with 30 in 1960
36One consequence of CAP EU sugar exports
Source Oxfam 2004
37US example sugar
38US example soft drinks
39US example food costs home and away
40The McBreakfast
Coca Cola Carbonated water, sugar/glucose-fructos
e, caramel colour, phosphoric acid, natural
flavours (vegetable source), caffeine. 310
calories. McGriddle - 33 gms of fat, 260
milligrams of cholesterol, and 550 calories, 1250
gms salt (bacon, egg, sausage, processed cheese,
between two pancakes soaked in sugar syrup) Hash
Browns (2 oz) 10 gms total fat, 5 gms sat fat
350 mg salt, 134 calories (potatoes, a blend of
partially hydrogenated beef tallow and cottonseed
oil, corn starch, salt, corn flour, dextrose,
sodium acid pyrophosphate (added to preserve
natural colour), spices and cooked in an A/V
shortening blend. (Source McDonalds Corporation)
41The public view concern and confusion
42Will the white paper fix the problem?
43Prime objective
- Halting the growth in childhood obesity is our
prime objective. We have set a national target to
halt, by 2010, the year on year increase in
obesity among children under 11 in the context of
a broader strategy to tackle obesity in the
population as a whole. This objective will be
shared jointly by the government departments with
responsibility for health, education and sport. -
44INTRODUCTION
- Health is inextricably linked to the way people
live their lives and the opportunities available
to choose health in the communities where they
live. This White Paper is about making a
difference to the choices people make.
45CONCLUSION
- Meeting the new health challenges of the 21st
century will need a step change in action.
These arrangements reflect the need for
Government, communities and - individuals to taken seriously their respective
- responsibilities for health
46On advertising to kids
- In line with the research conclusions and the
responses to the consultation, the Government
considers there is a strong case for action to
restrict further the advertising and promotion to
children of those foods and drinks that are high
in fat, salt and sugar
47What should be done now, right now?
48Getting the social marketing right
49A quick win Change the face of the public sector
- Audit provision, culture, belief to employees
and users of services - Change the environment of choice not just the
ideas in peoples heads. Smoking campaigning
shows the way. - Use the White Paper to draw the environment of
food to peoples attention - People understand the need to protect children.
Highlight these examples first - If you feel intimidated by power system get
NGOs and public to raise the questions.
50Health promoting NHS?
51 Health promoting NHS?
52 Health promoting (Council) Leisure centre?
53Health promoting NHS?
54Health promoting social services/housing
department?
55The health promoting school?
56The health promoting celebrity?
57The health promoting Department of Health?
58Thanks!
- Geof Rayner PhD FFPH
- City University GRAssociates Geof_at_GRAssociates.n
et