[net-gold] SPORTS MEDICINE : MEDICAL: CONDITIONS: OBESITY : PHYSICAL EXERCISE AND FITNESS: What Role Should Coca-Cola Play In Obesity Research?

  • From: "David P. Dillard" <jwne@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: Net-Gold -- Educator Gold <Educator-Gold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, net-gold@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, Net-Gold <Net-Gold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, NetGold <netgold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, K-12ADMINLIFE <K12ADMIN@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, K12AdminLIFE <K12AdminLIFE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, MediaMentor <mediamentor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Nabble Groups Net-Gold <ml-node+s3172864n3172864h56@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Net-Platinum <net-platinum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Sean Grigsby <myarchives1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Net-Gold <NetGold_general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Temple Gold Discussion Group <TEMPLE-GOLD@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Temple University Net-Gold Archive <net-gold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Net-Gold @ Wiggio.com" <netgold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Health Lists -- Health Diet Fitness Recreation Sports <healthrecsport@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, HEALTH-RECREATION-SPORTS-TOURISM@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Sport-Med <SPORT-MED@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, sports-med@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, sport-med@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 3 May 2014 13:02:11 -0400 (EDT)




.

.

SPORTS MEDICINE :

MEDICAL: CONDITIONS: OBESITY :

PHYSICAL EXERCISE AND FITNESS:

What Role Should Coca-Cola Play In Obesity Research?

.

.


What Role Should Coca-Cola Play In Obesity Research?

Larry Husten

Pharma and Healthcare

4/27/2014 @ 3:13PM

Forbes

http://www.forbes.com/sites/larryhusten/2014/04/27/ what-role-should-coca-cola-play-in-obesity-research/

.

A shorter URL for the above link:

.


http://tinyurl.com/kmath7p

.

.


What role should Coca-Cola KO +0.42% and other food and beverage companies play in funding and communicating research about nutrition and obesity?

.

The question is prompted by a recent article in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The state-of-the-art paper reviews the relationship of obesity and cardiovascular disease and presents the case that a decline in physical activity is the primary cause of the obesity epidemic. The article downplays the role of calories and diet and does not include the words sugar, soda, or beverage. Three of the five authors of the paper report financial relationships with Coca Cola.

.

It is important to acknowledge that there is an active scientific controversy about the relative importance of diet and exercise. But it also seems clear that the perspective on this controversy as presented in this paper is remarkably congruent with the interests of Coca Cola.

.

Defending Coca-Cola

.

I asked the lead author of the paper, Carl Lavie, a Louisiana cardiologist and obesity expert, to respond to concerns that the authors relationships to Coke may have affected the content of the paper. Here is Lavies (lightly edited) response:

.

My personal relationship was providing consulting and giving a couple of lectures on the importance of fitness. My colleagues have also consulted and received non-restricted educational grants for research studies. Coca Cola had nothing to do with the details of the study, analyzing results, or publishing the paper. Therefore, I do not think that this relationship adversely impacts any of the results of their studies or my invited state-of-the-art review article, which happens to be on a topic where I have published more than anyone else in the world during the past 10-15 years.

.

snip

.

A Less Benign View of Coca-Cola

.

Readers can make up their own minds about Lavies position, but I want to address a few individual points.

.

1. Lavie writes that his views are not for sale. I do not want to suggest anything so stark, but I also think it is fair and studies have demonstrated that gifts, even very small gifts, can exert strong unconscious effects. When combined with the flattery and attention of being designated a key opinion leader an unconscious alignment with a company can easily occur.

.

Moreover, as I wrote last year, in a recent paper in PLOS Medicine researchers conducted a systematic review of systematic reviews examining the association between sugar-sweetened beverages and weight gain and obesity. For the papers in which the authors reported no conflict of interest, 10 out of the 12 findings supported the association between sugar-sweetened beverages and weight gain or obesity. In stark contrast, 5 out of the 6 papers with industry support failed to find evidence for any such association. In other words, systematic reviews with industry support were 5 times more likely to find no significant association.Our results, wrote the authors, confirm the hypothesis that authors of systematic reviews may draw their conclusions in ways consistent with their sponsors interests.

.

2. Lavie defends Cokes funding of research by saying that pharma does this all the time. This analogy represents a stretch of logic. Although pharma-funded research is often criticized, and there are many active battles over the precise role for pharma in research, it is widely agreed that pharmaceutical companies must play a vital and important role in medical research. No one would seriously argue that Coca-Cola has medicinal value. The only active question is exactly how bad an effect Coke has on public health. A much better analogy, though still imperfect, is the tobacco industry.

.

3. I think it is naive to believe with Lavie that Cokes main interest in providing financial support to researchers in this field is to provide a public service. For-profit companies like Coke and Pepsi dont spend enormous sums of money just to provide a public service. They expect a significant return on their investment, though this may be difficult to quantify. In any case, it is more than obvious why Coke would be interested in supporting scientists who maintain that sugar does not play an important role in the obesity epidemic.

.

As I mentioned earlier, there is a very active controversy about the relative contributions of diet and activity to the obesity epidemic, but in my experience the vast majority of experts agree that diet, and sugar in particular, plays some sort of significant role in the problem. Regarding this point, another of the JACC authors, Timothy Church, a Louisiana preventive medicine specialist and exercise expert, sent a comment to elaborate on LaVies defense of the papers focus on exercise and its neglect of sugar and diet:

.

We could also have mentioned the effects of air conditioning, bacteria, viruses, cars, lack of sidewalks, antibiotic use, c-sections etc, etc on obesity. There are outstanding research papers looking at all of these things and more.

.

We were focused on exercise and fitness. There are thousands of diet and obesity papers that do NOT mention exercise, yet every time we do an exercise paper we are expected to go into great depth about diet. It is an interesting double standard.



But this view does not withstand critical scrutiny. Sugar is by no means equivalent to air conditioning, viruses, or c-sections. Sugar is at or near the center of nearly all discussions about obesity. Its just silly to pretend otherwise.

.

.

The complete article may be read at the URL above.

.

.


Sincerely,
David Dillard
Temple University
(215) 204 - 4584
jwne@xxxxxxxxxx
http://workface.com/e/daviddillard

Net-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/net-gold
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/net-gold.html
Index: http://tinyurl.com/myxb4w

General Internet & Print Resources
http://guides.temple.edu/general-internet
COUNTRIES
http://guides.temple.edu/general-country-info
EMPLOYMENT
http://guides.temple.edu/EMPLOYMENT
TOURISM
http://guides.temple.edu/tourism
DISABILITIES
http://guides.temple.edu/DISABILITIES
INDOOR GARDENING
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/IndoorGardeningUrban/
Educator-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Educator-Gold/
K12ADMINLIFE
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/K12AdminLIFE/
The Russell Conwell Learning Center Research Guide:
THE COLLEGE LEARNING CENTER
http://tinyurl.com/yae7w79
Information Literacy
http://guides.temple.edu/infolit

Nina Dillard's Photographs on Net-Gold
http://tinyurl.com/36qd2o
and also at
http://www.flickr.com/photos/neemers/

Twitter: davidpdillard

Temple University Site Map
https://sites.google.com/site/templeunivsitemap/home


Bushell, R. & Sheldon, P. (eds),
Wellness and Tourism: Mind, Body, Spirit,
Place, New York: Cognizant Communication Books.
Wellness Tourism: Bibliographic and Webliographic Essay
David P. Dillard
http://tinyurl.com/p63whl

INDOOR GARDENING
Improve Your Chances for Indoor Gardening Success
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/IndoorGardeningUrban/

SPORT-MED
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/sport-med.html
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sports-med/
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/sport-med.html

HEALTH DIET FITNESS RECREATION SPORTS TOURISM
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/healthrecsport/
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/health-recreation-sports-tourism.html






.

.

Please Ignore All Links to JIGLU
in search results for Net-Gold and related lists.
The Net-Gold relationship with JIGLU has
been terminated by JIGLU and these are dead links.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Net-Gold/message/30664
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/healthrecsport/message/145
Temple University Listserv Alert :
Years 2009 and 2010 Eliminated from Archives
https://sites.google.com/site/templeuniversitylistservalert/


.

.



Other related posts:

  • » [net-gold] SPORTS MEDICINE : MEDICAL: CONDITIONS: OBESITY : PHYSICAL EXERCISE AND FITNESS: What Role Should Coca-Cola Play In Obesity Research? - David P. Dillard