Page 1 of 13

Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 7:24 pm
by nobody
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-27446958#
The food industry should be regulated like the tobacco industry as obesity poses a greater global health risk than cigarettes, say international groups.

Consumers International and the World Obesity Federation are calling for the adoption of more stringent rules.

These could include pictures on food packaging of damage caused by obesity, similar to those on cigarette packets.

The Food and Drink Federation said the food industry was working to make healthy options for consumers.

Continue reading the main story
ā€œ
Start Quote

If we don't take action now we are going to have the same intransigence and foot-dragging in the food industry... as the tobacco industry in the 1960sā€

Luke Upchurch
Consumers International
'Avoid' tobacco situation
The two organisations - CI and WOF - said governments around the world should impose compulsory rules for the food and drink industry.

They said global deaths due to obesity and being overweight rose from 2.6 million in 2005 to 3.4 million in 2010.

The new rules could include reducing the levels of salt, saturated fat and sugar in food, improving food served in hospitals and schools, imposing stricter advertising controls, and educating the public about healthy eating.

Artificial trans-fats should be removed from all food and drink products within five years, said the recommendations.

Advertising to children, during television programmes such as the X-Factor, must be restricted, said the organisations.

Governments could review food prices, introduce taxes, change licensing controls and start new research to make this happen, the report said.

Luke Upchurch at Consumers International said they were asking for the "same level of global treaty" as the tobacco industry faced.

He said stricter advertising controls could include pictures on food packaging of the damage obesity can cause, similar to the images of smoking-related disease on cigarette boxes.

Will Brazil lead?
He said: "We want to avoid a situation like the 1960s, where the tobacco industry were saying there is nothing wrong with cigarettes, they are good for our health, and 30 or 40 years later millions have died.

"If we don't take action now, we are going to have the same intransigence and foot-dragging in the food industry."

He said the new rules would be at the "highest level" of global agreement, meaning governments would be "legally required" to implement them, instead of being able to opt out, which he said was the situation at the moment.

Mr Upchurch said he was confident about Brazil and Norway's support and that the UK government had "really good ideas".

Dr Ian Campbell, clinician and founder of the UK's National Obesity Forum, said: "This is very interesting and their recommendations are largely sensible and practical."

He said only when governments "accepted their responsibilities" and put consumers before producers "will we see real change".

Dr Campbell added: "One significant difference between tobacco regulation and food regulation is that we need food to survive; we don't need tobacco.

"The inescapable fact is obesity is killing on a massive scale and only action from governments to tackle head-on the fundamental causes of obesity will lead to any meaningful decreases."

Food industry's drive
Dr Tim Lobstein at the World Obesity Federation said: "If obesity was an infectious disease, we would have seen billions of dollars being invested in bringing it under control.

"But because obesity is largely caused by the overconsumption of fatty and sugary foods, we have seen policy-makers unwilling to take on the corporate interests who promote these foods."

He said governments needed to take "collective action".

Terry Jones, director of communications at the Food and Drink Federation, said UK food and drink manufacturers were "already" supporting improvements to public health through many of the measures outlined in the recommendations.

He said: "The industry's participation in the UK government's public health responsibility deal sees manufacturers working in partnership with government, health organisations, NGOs and other stakeholders."

My Jones said it was acting to reduce salt, saturated fat and calories in products, "provide clear nutritional labelling and to promote healthier diets and more physical activity".
good idea imo

proper fat people are grim

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 7:28 pm
by nobody
comments are jokes too

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 7:29 pm
by garethom
Guessing it's a lot easier to make majorly unhealthy food yourself at home than it is to make cigarettes.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 7:33 pm
by Muncey
"These could include pictures on food packaging of damage caused by obesity, similar to those on cigarette packets."

Wow. Just wow.

Cause it was a real success for cigarettes.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 8:57 pm
by rickyarbino
The future is bright.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:11 pm
by nitz
sugar tax

then invest that all the back tax into the health stytem to aid obesity

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:15 pm
by rickyarbino
Interesting implications there; mcdonalds, for instance, would lose its appeal swiftly. If they don't do it on all foods, they should at least label all sweets as causing tooth decay and gum rotting tbf.

Also, the tune in your sig is pretty good imo. The mix is solid.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:18 pm
by Genevieve
Particular food items or types of food do not cause obesity.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:28 pm
by OGLemon
put them in camps imo.:sarcasm:.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:53 pm
by nitz
jesslem wrote:Interesting implications there; mcdonalds, for instance, would lose its appeal swiftly. If they don't do it on all foods, they should at least label all sweets as causing tooth decay and gum rotting tbf.

Also, the tune in your sig is pretty good imo. The mix is solid.
Sir are you talking to me, or just in general?

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 9:55 pm
by nitz
Genevieve wrote:Particular food items or types of food do not cause obesity.
And what do you base this one? Food makes people fat, not the lack of food per se.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 10:02 pm
by OGLemon
Education would help alleviate the problem

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 10:04 pm
by Harkat
Genevieve wrote:Particular food items or types of food do not cause obesity.
innit. You can't compare em to cigarettes like that. It's just an overall unhealthy lifestyle that causes obesity. May as well put warnings on TVs that say if you sit around watching TV all day you'll have a shit physique.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 10:52 pm
by Genevieve
nitz wrote:
Genevieve wrote:Particular food items or types of food do not cause obesity.
And what do you base this one? Food makes people fat, not the lack of food per se.
Simple maths.

Say you use 2000 calories per day, and eat 2500 calories worth of fruit, nuts, free range meat, organic vegetables, etc.

Those 500 calories will be stored on the body as tissue. Depending on macronutritional ratios of your diet and your lifestyle (sedative vs resistance training vs cardiovascular training), these calories can be stored as either mostly muscle, mostly fat, or both in roughly equal amounts. Either way, you will gain weight.

But if you use up 2000 calories per day and you consume 2000 calories worth of junkfood per day, you won't gain or lose weight, you'll stay the same.
Harkat wrote:
Genevieve wrote:Particular food items or types of food do not cause obesity.
innit. You can't compare em to cigarettes like that. It's just an overall unhealthy lifestyle that causes obesity. May as well put warnings on TVs that say if you sit around watching TV all day you'll have a shit physique.
Yeah grat analogy. There's no such thing as healthy or unhealthy food, just healthy or unhealthy diets.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 10:53 pm
by rickyarbino
nitz wrote:
jesslem wrote:Interesting implications there; mcdonalds, for instance, would lose its appeal swiftly. If they don't do it on all foods, they should at least label all sweets as causing tooth decay and gum rotting tbf.

Also, the tune in your sig is pretty good imo. The mix is solid.
Sir are you talking to me, or just in general?
You.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 10:59 pm
by back_beat
Being fat should b made a crime imo. Monthly weighing and body fat calculations, - if ur too fat then u get fined. get fined/fail to lose weight 3 times in a row, u get put in an exercise camp where u are watched 24/7 an forced to exercise by performing menial labour until you've lost a appropriate amount of weight.

This also creates jobs for building an running the camps. Obesity down, economic growth up.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 11:07 pm
by ezza
do u reckon you could melt fat ppl and not kill them? like just a bit cus if u just melted the fat it wouldnt fuck up their main organs cus theres so much of it... and then u just like poke a hole and drain them out

ive always wanted to spitroast a fat person and just see how they melt exactly

i reckon it would look so cool just watching them kinda melt

but only do that to ones after they fail backbeats plan like 3/4 times

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 11:10 pm
by rickyarbino
I'm pretty sure that human fat is liquid.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 11:11 pm
by Sexual_Chocolate
cant wait for the incomming o2 tax.

Re: Food should be regulated like tobacco

Posted: Mon May 19, 2014 11:12 pm
by Harkat
melt the sauna tube