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Many
Weight-Loss Ads Misleading
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nearly
40% of weight-loss advertisements in a study by US regulators
made at least one representation that was almost certainly false,
according to a report released.
And about 55% of the ads included at least one representation that
was very likely to be false or lacked adequate substantiation of
its promises, the analysis by Federal Trade Commission staff said.
The report urged Americans,
who spend billions annually on weight-loss products and services,
to look skeptically at ads that promise a quick-fix for dropping
pounds, such as "you can eat as much as you want and still lose
weight."
Consumer testimonials
and before-and-after photos were common in diet promotions but
"rarely portrayed realistic weight loss," the report said.
The FTC evaluated 300
advertisements from broadcast and cable television, infomercials,
radio, magazines, newspapers, supermarket tabloids, direct mail,
commercial e-mail and Web sites. The staff also compared 1992
ads from eight national magazines to 2001 ads in the same publications.
"False or misleading
claims are common in weight-loss advertising, and, based on our
comparison of 1992 magazine ads with magazine ads for 2001, the
number of products and the amount of advertising, much of it deceptive,
appears to have increased dramatically over the last decade,"
the report said.
Many of the ads with
likely false claims appeared in mainstream magazines such as Family
Circle and Cosmopolitan, the report said.
The FTC staff did not
evaluate whether specific claims were substantiated, but the report
said many of the promised effects clearly were unsupported by
scientific evidence.
Claims that are too good
to be true include assertions that a user can lose a pound a day
or more for extended periods; that substantial weight loss, without
surgery, can be achieved without diet or exercise; and that users
can lose weight regardless of how much they eat, the report said.
Consumers "must become
more knowledgeable about the importance of achieving and maintaining
healthy weight, more informed about how to shop for weight-loss
products and services, and more skeptical of ads promising quick
fixes," the report said.
Media screening standards
also would reduce the amount of blatantly deceptive advertising,
the report said.
Reference
Source 89
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