scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Public health, corporations and the New Responsibility Deal: promoting partnerships with vectors of disease?

TLDR
The products of tobacco, alcohol and food industries are responsible for a significant and growing proportion of the global burden of disease, and the greatest challenge and opportunity for public health lies in reducing the contributions of tobacco use, unhealthy diet and harmful alcohol consumption.
Abstract
The products of tobacco, alcohol and food industries are responsible for a significant and growing proportion of the global burden of disease. Smoking and alcohol combined account for 12.5% of global deaths and 19.5% in high-income countries, while six diet-related risk factors account for 13.6 and 17.5% of deaths, respectively. 1 Arguably the greatest challenge and opportunity for public health lies in reducing the contributions of tobacco use, unhealthy diet and harmful alcohol consumption to the rising global burden of non-communicable diseases. 2 This demonstrates a pressing need to improve our understanding of how corporations contribute to this disease burden, both directly through the promotion of products damaging to health and indirectly through influence over public policy. The concept of an industrial epidemic—an epidemic emerging from the commercializa-tion of potentially health-damaging products—lends itself to this purpose. 3,4 Adapting traditional public health constructs, it identifies the role of the host (the consumer), agent (the product, e.g. cigarettes, alcohol), environment and, crucially, the disease vector (the corporation). The vector analogy was first described in relation to the tobacco epidemic, 3 and tobacco control remains the only field where the commercial vector has been systematically studied. Analysis of millions of internal tobacco industry documents 5 has revealed the multiple strategies via which the tobacco industry has sought to and, often successfully, undermined public health policies. 6,7 Consequently, serious attention has been given to managing the conflicts of interest between public health and the tobacco industry. At global level, the World Health Organization (WHO) has actively sought to monitor and contain industry influence, with Article 5.3 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco (FCTC, WHO's first global public health treaty) requiring all 172 parties to the treaty, including the UK, to protect health policies 'from commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry.' 8 Yet WHO's approach to food and alcohol industries is strikingly different, with both its Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health 9 and new global alcohol strategy 10 assuming scope for partnership and cooperation that the FCTC precludes. Similarly in the UK, the food and alcohol industries have recently been invited to join a 'partnership' with government 11 from which the tobacco industry is excluded. The 'Public Health Responsibility Deal', on which, at the time of writing, limited details have emerged, 11,12 is heavily reliant on the concept of corporate social responsibility, with a clear presumption in favour of …

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Taxing unhealthy food and drinks to improve health

TL;DR: An increasing number of countries are introducing taxes on unhealthy food and drinks, but will they improve health?
Journal ArticleDOI

Exposing and addressing tobacco industry conduct in low-income and middle-income countries

TL;DR: Exemplar LMICs show this action can be achieved and indicate that exposing tobacco industry misconduct is an essential first step, as outlined in Article 5.3 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
Journal ArticleDOI

A proposed approach to systematically identify and monitor the corporate political activity of the food industry with respect to public health using publicly available information

TL;DR: A framework for categorizing the corporate political activity of the food industry with respect to public health is developed and an approach to systematically identify and monitor it is proposed to help redress any imbalance of interests and thereby contribute to the prevention and control of non‐communicable diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of prediabetes in England from 2003 to 2011: population-based, cross-sectional study

TL;DR: There has been a marked increase in the proportion of adults in England with prediabetes, and the socioeconomically deprived are at substantial risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Corporate Social Responsibility and Access to Policy Elites: An Analysis of Tobacco Industry Documents

TL;DR: A review of tobacco industry documents shows that policies on corporate social responsibility can enable access to and dialogue with policymakers at the highest level.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Global strategy on diet, physical activity and health

TL;DR: An expert report aiming to design strategies in promoting healthy diets and physical activity behaviours was published a year ago by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of policies and programmes to reduce the harm caused by alcohol

TL;DR: School-based education does not reduce alcohol-related harm, although public information and education-type programmes have a role in providing information and in increasing attention and acceptance of alcohol on political and public agendas.
Journal Article

Global strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol

TL;DR: The concept of the harmful use of alcohol is broad and encompasses the drinking that causes detrimental health and social consequences for the drinker, the people around the Drinker and society at large, as well as the patterns of drinking that are associated with increased risk of adverse health outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The perils of ignoring history: Big Tobacco played dirty and millions died. How similar is Big Food?

TL;DR: Analysis of empirical and historical evidence pertaining to tobacco and food industry practices, messages, and strategies to influence public opinion, legislation and regulation, litigation, and the conduct of science highlights important lessons that can be learned from the tobacco experience and recommends actions for the food industry.
Book

Tobacco control in developing countries.

TL;DR: The economic rationale for intervention in the tobacco market is discussed in this article, where the authors estimate the cost of tobacco use and the supply side effects of tobacco control policies, and the impact of trade liberalization on tobacco consumption.
Related Papers (5)