Fighting Obesity in the Courts
Super-Size Me
Legal Issues 101
Fighting Obesity in the Courts
The 'obesity epidemic' has garnered much attention by the news media and western governments over the past decade. Their concern is well founded, because there has been a three-fold increase in the prevalence of childhood obesity in the United States since 1980 (reviewed by Gleason and Dodd S118). According to the results of a survey conducted in 2009 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) approximately 12.0% and 15.8% of all school-aged children were judged to be either obese or overweight, respectively ("Surveillance Summaries, 28). That's close to 30% of all K-12 students in the United States having a weight problem. Should a weight problem become entrenched in that child's life, their academic performance will suffer and they are at an increased risk for developing significant mental and physical health problems as adults (reviewed by Gleason and Dodd S118). The future costs of this epidemic to western societies could be staggering.
Many theories have been proposed to explain the epidemic rise in overweight school children, including a sedentary lifestyle due to television watching and electronics gaming, too much sugar and saturated fats, aggressive marketing of junk food to children, a lack food labeling guidelines that help children and adults make informed dietary choices, oversized portions, and the absence of a nutritional education (CDC "Overweight and Obesity"). Parents and children alike are thus faced with a culture that seems to encourage childhood obesity, so it should come as no surprise that some parents and their attorneys are fighting back through lawsuits alleging fast food restaurants, like McDonalds, have engaged in misleading and false marketing practices that contribute directly to the childhood obesity problem.
2. Suing "Big Food"
The attacks against fast food restaurants have in part been modeled on how attorneys and state's attorney generals went after Big Tobacco...
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