Soda tax losses a lesson in choice
Nutrition and public policy expert Marion Nestle answers readers' questions in this column written exclusively for The Chronicle.
[...] it also taught that appeals to voter concerns about higher prices, job losses and personal autonomy are more effective than appeals based solely on health considerations.
Because dietary choices seem so personal, the influence of the food marketing environment on personal choices is not intuitively obvious.
Soda and fast food companies market their products to low-income and minority groups, and make sure their products are inexpensive, readily available and ubiquitously advertised.
To gain traction, food and beverage companies support the activities of community groups, sponsor playgrounds, and place their brand logos on everything they can.
Community-based campaigns not only can focus on the health consequences of poor diets but also can demonstrate to residents just how food companies put corporate health above public health and engage low-income communities in achieving corporate goals.
Teaching how the food marketing environment works should stimulate plenty of questions about why healthier foods aren't more widely available in communities - and at affordable prices.
The American Heart Association recently published a massive review - with rankings - of environmental interventions aimed at improving personal diets, physical activity levels, and smoking habits (See Circulation 2012; 126:1514-1563).
The review cites evidence for strategies to improve diets such as media campaigns, price subsidies, school meals and gardens, and restrictions on marketing, as well as taxes as portion caps.