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Health
Chief Warns
Fast-Food Joints to Shape Up
Excerpt
By
Randy Fab,
Reuters Health
Fast food joints may soon get singled out by the U.S. health department
head if they don't shape up and stop feeding the country's obesity
problem.
Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson on Thursday said public pressure might do far more
than lawsuits and legislation to curb the junk food explosion
that costs the government $117 billion each year in obesity-related
health care costs.
'I'm going to start giving out
awards and singling out ones that are doing good and the ones
that aren't,' he told reporters at a food policy conference. 'If
I get in trouble, I get in trouble.'
Thompson specified PepsiCo Inc.,
Coca-Cola Co., McDonald's, Wendy's and Taco Bell as companies
that could offer consumers healthier options and promote more-sensible
diets.
Thompson made his remarks as lawyers
were preparing to file new lawsuits that accuse McDonald's Corp.,
Burger King and other drive-through chains for the rising obesity
rate in the United States.
Thompson, who has recently lost
15 pounds by eating less rice, potatoes and bread, said he prefers
government programs that offer cities and food companies incentives
to promote healthier lifestyles.
'It is important to pressure the
food industry, the fast food industry, the soft drink society
... getting them to offer healthier foods and put more things
on the menu dealing with fruits and vegetables,' he said. 'I don't
support lawsuits. I think we can do this as a society.'
At the conference, attorney John
Banzhaf, whose 1970s crusades against the tobacco industry helped
get cigarette commercials off the air, presented the National
Restaurant Association with a notice of possible legal action
against the industry.
Banzhaf and other lawyers claim
that food companies, just like cigarette producers in the past,
are not properly warning consumers that their products may be
addictive.
The National Restaurant Association,
which represents the fast-food giants and some 870,000 other U.S.
restaurants, has countered that those claims are frivolous.
The first major obesity case, filed
against McDonald's, was dismissed in January. At least two other
cases have been dropped.
Nearly two out of every three adult
Americans and 15 percent of children are overweight or obese,
Thompson said.
Thompson said Americans can drastically
reduce the amount of obesity-related health care costs by making
simple lifestyle changes like walking 30 minutes a day.
Reference
Source 89
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