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A U.S. District Court judge ruled last week that the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Health and Human Services
(DHHS) violated federal laws when they selected
individuals with known financial ties to various food industries
to serve as members to the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee.
This group was in charge of drawing up the latest nutritional guidelines
that comprise the USDA's "Food Pyramid".
In addition to its educational purpose, the pyramid also serves
as a basis for all federally funded food programs in the United
States.
The research and advocacy group Physicians
Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) had filed the lawsuit
last December.
PCRM asserts that the current food pyramid is unhealthy because
it promotes the consumption of meat, eggs and dairy as part of the
daily diet.
They also maintain that it is racially biased since nonwhite races
are more likely to be lactose intolerant and some are more susceptible
to diet-related chronic illnesses including heart disease, stroke,
hypertension, obesity, diabetes and certain types of cancer.
As a matter of fact, several groups and people within the African-American
community openly supported PCRM's lawsuit, including the NAACP,
former Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders, Martin Luther King, III,
and Muhammad Ali.
In its lawsuit, PCRM claimed
that there were serious conflicts of interest affecting six out
of 11 members on the Advisory Committee, and that these conflicts
influenced their decisions
Some of the conflicts were as follows:
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Cutberto Garza (chairman of the committee) - direct
ties with the National Dairy Council
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Richard Deckelbaum - received grant funding from the
National Dairy Promotion and Research Program and the National
Cattlemen's Beef Association
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Scott Grundy - served on the American Egg Board
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Johanna Dwyer - on the American Meat Institute Committee
and the National Dairy Promotion and Research Program Board
and was also sponsored by the National Dairy Council for a visiting
professorship
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Roland Weinsier - received a $500,000 grant from Bristol-Myers
Squibb/Mead Johnson, a company that sells and promotes dairy-based
products
- Eileen Kennedy - serves as an advisor to the Board of
Directors of the Dannon Research Institute, Inc., another dairy
company.
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