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Strengthening of accountability systems to create healthy food environments and reduce global obesity
journal contribution
posted on 2015-06-20, 00:00 authored by Boyd SwinburnBoyd Swinburn, V Kraak, H Rutter, S Vandevijvere, T Lobstein, Gary SacksGary Sacks, F Gomes, T Marsh, R MagnussonTo achieve WHO's target to halt the rise in obesity and diabetes, dramatic actions are needed to improve the healthiness of food environments. Substantial debate surrounds who is responsible for delivering effective actions and what, specifically, these actions should entail. Arguments are often reduced to a debate between individual and collective responsibilities, and between hard regulatory or fiscal interventions and soft voluntary, education-based approaches. Genuine progress lies beyond the impasse of these entrenched dichotomies. We argue for a strengthening of accountability systems across all actors to substantially improve performance on obesity reduction. In view of the industry opposition and government reluctance to regulate for healthier food environments, quasiregulatory approaches might achieve progress. A four step accountability framework (take the account, share the account, hold to account, and respond to the account) is proposed. The framework identifies multiple levers for change, including quasiregulatory and other approaches that involve government-specified and government-monitored progress of private sector performance, government procurement mechanisms, improved transparency, monitoring of actions, and management of conflicts of interest. Strengthened accountability systems would support government leadership and stewardship, constrain the influence of private sector actors with major conflicts of interest on public policy development, and reinforce the engagement of civil society in creating demand for healthy food environments and in monitoring progress towards obesity action objectives.
History
Journal
LancetVolume
385Issue
9986Pagination
2534 - 2545Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
ISSN
1474-547XLanguage
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2015, ElsevierUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Environmental HealthFood IndustryFood SupplyGlobal HealthHealth PolicyHealth PromotionHealth Services Needs and DemandHumansInternational CooperationObesityPolicy MakingSocial MarketingSocial ResponsibilityScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineMedicine, General & InternalGeneral & Internal MedicinePUBLIC-HEALTHSELF-REGULATIONPOLICYNUTRITIONAGREEMENTSSTANDARDSCOMPANIESDISEASESBURDEN