BMJ: Public health scientists and a government committee working
on nutritional advice receive funding from the very companies
whose products are widely held to be responsible for the
obesity crisis, an
investigation
by
The
BMJ
reveals
today.
Findings from the special report raise important questions about
the potential for bias and conflict of interest among public health
experts as the UK faces a growing obesity epidemic.
Recipients of research funding from sugar
and other related
industries include members of the Scientific Advisory
Committee on Nutrition (SACN), which is currently updating
official advice on carbohydrates consumption, and researchers
working for the Medical Research Council’s Human Nutrition
Rese
arch unit (HNR).
HNR scientists have received research funding and funding in
kinds from companies including Coca
-
Cola, Mars, Nestlé,
Sainsbury’s, the Institute of Brewing and Distilling, Weight
Watchers International and others.
As a former HNR researcher, Susan Jebb, professor of diet and
population health at the University of Oxford and chair of the government’s Responsibility Deal Food Network, received
support for her work from Coca
-
Cola, Sainsbury’s, Cereal
Partners and Rank Hovis McDougal, among ot
hers. Between
2008 and 2010, Coca
-
Cola donated £194,000 to one research
study on which she was the principal investigator.
Listed as sole or co
-
principal investigator on 10 industry
supported research projects between 2004 and 2015, Jebb
attracted funding
worth £1.37 million to the HNR unit. Some of
the companies that supported her work at HNR, including
Unilever and Coca
-
Cola, are now members of the
Responsibility Deal, which Jebb chairs.
Jebb told The
BMJ
that all of her research was analysed and
report
ed independently of industry, and added: “Everything I do,
whether in my research or as chair of the responsibility deal, is
to try to improve public health.”
Similarly, research carried out by members of the SACN has
been supported by companies including
PepsiCo, Coca
-
Cola,
Mars and Nestlé.
An analysis of the annual declarations of interest by SACN
members shows that between 2001 and 2012 there was an
average of 45 declarations each year involving companies from
the food, drinks and pharmaceutical indust
ries.
Of the 40 scientists affiliated with SACN between 2001 and
2012, only 13 have had no interests to declare.
David Stuckler, professor of political economy and sociology at
Oxford University, says the engagement of companies such as
Coca
-
Cola with the work of public health organisations "falls
into the category of efforts to crowd out public regulation, to try
to weaken public health by working with it”.
The
BMJ
also reports evidence that the Responsibility Deal is
not working. Not only do industry’s
pledges made under the deal not add up to the government’s target of a 5% reduction in
calorie consumption, but the UK’s most comprehensive survey
of shopping habits shows that between 2006 and 2014 the
number of calories in the national weekly shop has i
ncreased
by almost 12 %.