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Science report scandal could lead to lawsuits that hold sugary beverage
industry accountable
Scandal could lead to lawsuits against sugary beverage industry
BY Michael T. Roberts Emilie Aguirre
SPECIAL TO THE NEWS
Tuesday, November 1, 2016, 4:00 AM
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Lawsuits against sugar-sweetened beverage companies have been unsuccessful to
date. But that could change after the revelation of the recent scandal.
(piotr_malczyk/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
BY Michael T. Roberts Emilie Aguirre
SPECIAL TO THE NEWS
Tuesday, November 1, 2016, 4:00 AM
Recent findings reported in the Annals of Internal Medicine show that
the sugar-sweetened beverage industry has financially backed scientific
researchers to discard a link between sugary beverage consumption and
metabolic outcomes such as obesity and diabetes.
It is the latest in a series of related scandals to rock the public
health world.
This news, coupled with the revelation that two of Harvard University's
most famous nutritionists collaborated with the sugar industry in the
1960s to downplay sugar's role in coronary heart disease, provides
conclusive evidence that the sugary beverage industry has manipulated
the scientific process for decades at the expense of the public's
health.
This reprehensible manipulation undermines the credibility of the
sugar-sweetened beverage industry's opposition to recent regulatory
initiatives, tax measures, and federal nutritional guidance designed to
curb consumption of sugary beverages.
The sweetened beverage industry may sugarcoat science: report
These revelations may do more than reprehensibly undermine credibility.
This manipulation may also provide the damning evidence and motivation
needed to support the use of another legal tool, long used to help
combat major health problems: litigation. Litigation has been largely
unsuccessful in holding sugar-sweetened beverage companies accountable
to date. But these revelations of industry capture of science could
change the game.
It should be noted that there has been a legal pandemic of consumer
class action lawsuits against food enterprises in recent years. Many of
these lawsuits challenge various food labels as misleading. The
popularity of these cases stems in part from the absence of food
labeling regulation and enforcement by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
The class actions fill in regulatory gaps for the FDA by bringing
actions alleging that various food labels violate state consumer
protection laws intended to prohibit deceptive trade practices. Thus,
gaps in the regulation of food have given rise to the use of litigation
as a legal tool to provide remedy and effect change. In this vein,
litigation is viewed by some as both a useful counterpart to government
regulation and as a way to propel further regulation.
In the case of sugary beverages, litigation could help transfer the
cost of obesity and diabetes back to the manufacturer, rather than to
the consumer and the public. Legal theories against sugar-sweetened
beverage companies could range from misleading advertisements,
deceptive practices, and targeting of children, to serving foods that
are dangerous (addictive) beyond the extent ordinarily understood by
consumers.
Pepsi plans to cut sugar, but your cola can still make you fat
Advocates of using litigation to hold sugar-sweetened beverage
companies accountable for their share of the costs of sugary beverage
consumption may want to borrow a page from the tobacco litigation of
the 1990s.
To be sure, tobacco litigation had an inauspicious start. Despite
research linking smoking to cancer, hundreds of lawsuits against
tobacco manufacturers from the 1950s to the 1990s were unsuccessful. It
was only when litigation focused more on the tobacco industry's
deceptive efforts to hook consumers on addictive cigarettes that
tobacco litigation began to achieve success.
Michael T. Roberts, executive director at UCLA School of Law Resnick
Program for Food Law and Policy.
Michael T. Roberts, executive director at UCLA School of Law Resnick Program
for Food Law and Policy.
(UCLA)
The tobacco companies' knowing deception of consumers became known as
the "smoking gun." It provided evidence that tobacco executives knew
the risks associated with cigarettes and did their best to hide those
risks and addict their customers.
When this evidence came to light, state attorneys general organized a
massive litigation effort amongst the states. It was this litigation
effort that finally met with success.
Health conscious trend has ‘Big Food’ rethinking brand strategies
In the late 1990s, 46 states and territories negotiated the Master
Settlement Agreement, securing annual payments of several billion
dollars in perpetuity as repayment for smoking-related healthcare
costs, and four states individually negotiated settlements to recover
smoking-related Medicaid costs.
It was this agreement that also resulted in several restrictions on
tobacco advertising that have become the new norm in the American
landscape.
Naysayers of a big tobacco-style lawsuit against the sugar-sweetened
beverage industry point to the lack of a smoking gun showing that the
industry knowingly made their products addictive at the expense of
public health. The sticking point for using this litigation strategy
for sugar is that it is unclear whether the sugar-sweetened beverage
industry's manipulation of scientific research constitutes a smoking
gun equivalent to that used in the tobacco litigation.
What is clear is that the industry has not played fair and has
short-shrifted consumers and public health. It may be that this public
malfeasance combined with the mounting non-industry biased evidence
that links sugar-sweetened beverages to obesity and diabetes will
galvanize attorneys general to exercise their broad powers and
authority to act as public advocates to address this serious public
health problem.
Philadelphia becomes first major American city to tax soda
Finally, the sugar-sweetened beverage industry should also bear in mind
that when it comes to litigation, it may win the battle(s), but lose
the war. Aside from the question of whether a smoking gun has been or
will be found, the litigation problem for sugar-sweetened beverage
companies could evolve into a much bigger societal problem turning the
tide against these companies, as it did for tobacco.
Michael T. Roberts, executive director, and Emilie Aguirre, academic
fellow, UCLA School of Law Resnick Program for Food Law and Policy.
Tags:
science
obesity
health studies
soda
lawsuits
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