Category: Issue 489

  • Research Examines Effect of Glycemic Index on Brain

    A recent study examining the effects of low- and high-carbohydrate foods on brain activity has purportedly concluded that meals with a high glycemic index (GI) “decreased plasma glucose, increased hunger, and selectively stimulated brain regions associated with reward and craving in the last postprandial period, which is a time with special significance to eating behavior…

  • NYT Article Targets Counterfeit Food and Beverage Products

    A recent New York Times article reported that the distribution of counterfeit food and beverage products is widespread. In “Counterfeit Food More Widespread Than Suspected,” authors Stephen Castle and Doreen Carvajal note that although the scandal in Europe surrounding the substitution of horse meat for beef products has garnered the most attention from consumers, in…

  • Atlantic Article Advocates Role of Food Industry in Obesity Prevention

    “An enormous amount of media space has been dedicated to promoting the notion that all processed food, and only processed food, is making us sickly and overweight,” writes David Freedman in a July/August 2013 Atlantic article arguing against the widely-held belief that “the food-industrial complex—particularly the fast-food industry—has turned all the powers of food-processing science…

  • FBI Seeks Responsible Party in GM Crop Destruction

    According to a news source, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has become involved in the search for the person or persons responsible for the destruction of genetically modified (GM) sugar beet crops in southern Oregon. The purported “economic sabotage” occurred in different fields during two nights in June 2013 and resulted in the loss…

  • Advertising Standards Board Upholds Children’s Marketing Complaint Against Cereal Maker

    The Obesity Policy Coalition (OPC) recently announced that the Australian Advertising Standards Board (ASB) has upheld its complaint alleging that a TV commercial for Kellogg Co.’s Coco Pops® cereal violated the Responsible Children’s Marketing Initiative (RCMI). According to ASB’s case report, the advertisement under review featured a bowl of Coco Pops® playing “Marco Polo” in…

  • Parens Patriae Deemed a Flawed Strategy to Address Obesity

    A recent law review note outlines the history of parens patriae actions that allow states to sue to protect the health and welfare of their citizens, explores its use by state attorneys general to advance public health policy—particularly regarding the use of tobacco—and argues that it cannot be successfully wielded against food companies to address…

  • Plaintiffs’ Law Firm Files 17 Lawsuits in Hepatitis A Outbreak Linked to Frozen Berries

    According to Marler Clark’s Website, the firm has filed 17 lawsuits against Townsend Farms, the Oregon-based company whose frozen berry and pomegranate seed blend products have purportedly been associated with a hepatitis A outbreak that has, to date, sickened more than 100 people in seven states. The firm has filed eight individual suits in the…

  • 5-Hour Energy Drink Makers Seek Trade Secret Protection in Tennessee

    The companies that make 5-Hour Energy have reportedly expanded a quest to keep their recipe from disclosure by seeking the application of a Tennessee law protecting trade secrets to requests made by the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance and state attorney general for all of the product’s ingredients and their amounts. Information about the…