Such tactics make it tougher to teach good eating habits to kids who equate
food with entertainment, she said.
"It becomes a marketing thing, a fashion thing," says Lynch. "You want to buy
the food with the cartoons on the box or the toy."
The industry should have done more to direct the child obesity debate, agrees
Pepsi's Leach. Much of the focus has been on getting junk food out of school
vending machines, but Leach argues that's just a tiny part of the solution.
He says food companies ! including his own, one of the biggest losers in the
vending machine fight ! should have offered healthier vending options long ago,
then redirected attention to other critical issues, such as getting physical
education back in schools.
Science lag
In many ways the food industry is chasing a moving target. For years, food
production was a better understood science than nutrition. And so whole grains
were abandoned and hydrogenated fats embraced.
The medical community takes much of the blame, says Dr. George Blackburn of
Harvard Medical School's nutrition division.
"We didn't even put nutrition in the medical curriculum except in the last 30
or 40 years," he says. "As soon as we got drugs, to hell with nutrition. We're
just now getting it to be a professional responsibility to be sensitive to
people's healthy eating."
Today, the food industry suffers from nutrition research overload, with tidal
waves of new and sometimes contradictory health findings that strain its ability
to produce appealing foods that are in sync with the latest science.
Even when companies succeed, they still are susceptible to scientific
surprises that can break a business.
When saturated fat was the enemy, companies reformulated their products, says
Grocery Manufacturers Association spokeswoman Stephanie Childs. Only later did
they learn that the trans fats they had replaced them with were even worse.
But the science lag can't explain the growing ubiquity of food or the
ballooning portions of it, from bigger buckets of movie popcorn to McDonald's
much vilified ! and now defunct ! Supersized burgers.
The industry again points to the consumer, saying that starting in the 1970s
people demanded convenience and bargains. Smart companies launched family sizes
and sold food everywhere from office supply chains to hardware stores.
"It's a tremendous way of getting people to buy more at lower cost to the
producer," says Nestle, who notes research has shown that the more food people
have, the more they eat. "There's no question that that's an incentive to buy.
Everybody loves a bargain."
This has changed how Americans eat. So-called portion distortion has
contributed enormously to obesity.
And overeating becomes even easier when food is everywhere, Nestle says. Meal
time is all the time when everything from cars to backpacks to grocery carts are
redesigned with snack food holders to accommodate constant munching.
But Nestle acknowledges it becomes a chicken-or-egg question. Lifestyles have
changed and Americans want to eat big and on the run. Did that lead food
companies to change, or did new products change Americans?
Engineering obesity?
Despite his criticism of the industry's practices, Yale's Katz acknowledges
companies are in a difficult position. Ultimately, they sell food, and staying
in business means selling the foods people want. Public health is secondary.
But what if those companies engineered their foods to make you eat more of
them? Though he acknowledges that evidence is scarce, Katz believes companies do
just that, much the way tobacco companies were accused of tinkering with
nicotine.
Research shows that people eat more when faced with a variety of foods, or
even a variety of flavors within a single food. For example, you are less likely
to overeat plain baked potatoes than those drenched in butter, salt, sour cream
and chives.
Sugary cereals, Katz notes, have more salt in them than many potato and corn
chips. Katz believes that's one way to make a cereal's flavor more complex and
appealing to get people to eat more of it.
Industry officials dispute Katz's theory. Earl, of the Food Products
Association, says he knows of no company that has knowingly manipulated
ingredients as Katz suggests.
Whatever the food industry's share of the blame, Tillotson, the Tufts
professor, thinks obesity lawsuits are inappropriate and Congress is considering
a measure to bar them. Food companies were asked to feed a hungry nation; suing
now penalizes them for doing so, he believes.
Industry officials contend lawsuits divert resources from efforts to educate
consumers and to produce healthier foods. Market demand and a sense of social
responsibility are better catalysts for change, they say.
And some companies deserve real credit for living up to that.
* General Mills Inc., the nation's No. 2 cereal maker, now makes all its
cereals from whole-grain flour.
* Kraft Foods Inc., the nation's biggest food manufacturer, says it's
curbing snack food ads to children and will redesign packaging to flag its
healthier products. The company also recently cut the fat in hundreds of
products and stopped marketing snacks at schools.
* PepsiCo Inc., which credits healthier products with two-thirds of its
revenue growth, has launched various healthy eating education efforts and even
has tied executive bonus programs to the development and marketing of healthier
items.
* The Coca-Cola Co. now labels some of its sodas with nutrition data for
the entire bottle, not just one serving.
But while critics applaud the changes, they say industry goodwill and
consumer demand aren't reliable enough. The realities of competition can push
goodwill aside and consumers can't be counted on to want what's good for them.
Leach acknowledges it's true that industry will follow consumer demand, and
that includes high-fat, high-sugar foods.
That's why Richard Daynard, director of the obesity and law project at
Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, says lawsuits ! some are
pending, some were dismissed or settled ! still are needed as part of a larger
assessment of the obesity epidemic.
"You can't get to a solution until you get a diagnosis. If you don't see the
role of the junk food industry in causing the problem and in continuing to
maintain the problem, you've missed a big part of the diagnosis," says Daynard,
who is leading a soda industry lawsuit.
"Things that dramatically assign blame, like a lawsuit, help people make a
diagnosis."
Ellen Van Gelder, an obese 41-year-old health care worker from Concord, N.H.,
doesn't need a lawsuit to make her diagnosis.
Though she disapproves of many of the food industry's marketing methods and
wishes food companies would make it easier to eat healthier, ultimate
responsibility for her weight is her own, she says.
"I would love to blame somebody else. The reality is it's each person's
responsibility," says Van Gelder, who has battled her weight her entire life.
"You put the food on your plate. You choose whether to eat
it."