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Children’s
Coalition: IOM Panel Lacks Objectivity
January 26, 2005
Contact: Dr. Alvin Poussaint (617) 278-4105
apoussaint@jbcc.harvard.edu
For Immediate Release
The Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood is challenging the
objectivity of the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academies upcoming “Workshop on Marketing Strategies that Foster
Healthy Food and Beverage Choices in Children and Youth”. The
January 27, 2005 workshop will feature marketers from Kraft,
General Mills, Pepsico and McDonalds, as well as television and
advertising executives, all of who have a vested interest in
marketing junk food to children. Only one of the workshop’s ten
participants, the Kaiser Foundation’s Victoria Rideout, has been
publicly critical of the food industry’s marketing practices.
“It is disappointing that a prestigious and influential medical
organization would rely so heavily on industry perspectives,”
said Harvard Psychiatrist Alvin Poussaint of the Judge Baker
Children’s Center in Boston, who noted that no medical doctors
were among the panelists. “A panel on which the majority of
participants earn their livelihood from child-directed
advertising is going to start with the assumption marketers have
the right to target children. But if we are serious about
tackling childhood obesity, we need to first consider the right
of parents to raise healthy children.”
Food marketing is a factor in childhood obesity. A number of
prominent organizations – such as the World Health Organization
and the American Academy of Pediatrics – have called for
restrictions on junk food marketing to children. In response,
several food companies and advertising agencies, including IOM
presenters Kraft and General Mills, recently formed the Alliance
for American Advertising to deflect government regulation of
food marketing.
But regulation might be necessary. “We need to ask what is best
for children - and the answer may very well be to stop
undermining parental authority by marketing directly to kids,”
said Dr. Michael Brody of the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry. “It is unlikely, however, that this
industry-favored panel will seriously consider that option.”
The Campaign For A Commercial-Free Childhood (formerly Stop
Commercial Exploitation of Children) is a national coalition of
health care professionals, educators, advocacy groups and
concerned parents who counter the harmful effects of marketing
to children through action, advocacy, education, research, and
collaboration among organizations and individuals who care about
children. On March 11-13, 2005, CCFC will hold its fourth annual
summit: Consuming Kids: How Marketing Undermines Children’s
Health, Values & Behavior at Howard University in Washington,
DC. For more information, please visit
www.commercialfreechildhood.org
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