|
March 12, 2004
OWG Principal Recommended Action Items
Appendix A - List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
Appendix C - Notice Concerning July 30, 2003, Secretary's Roundtable on Obesity/Nutrition
Appendix D - August 11, 2003, Charge Memorandum
Appendix E - FDA Obesity Working Group Membership
Appendix F - FDA Obesity Working Group - Subgroup Members
Appendix H - Developing Effective Consumer Messages
Date | February 11, 2004 |
---|---|
From | Chair and Vice Chair, Obesity Working Group |
Subject | Working Group Report and Recommendations |
To | Mark B. McClellan, M.D., Ph.D. Commissioner of Food and Drugs |
We are pleased to transmit the final report and recommendations of the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Obesity Working Group (OWG). You established the OWG on August 11, 2003. The OWG met eight times from August 28, 2003, to January 22, 2004. In addition, the OWG held one public meeting, one workshop, two roundtable discussions (one with health professionals/academicians, and one with representatives of consumer groups), and solicited comments on obesity-related issues. The public meeting examined FDA's role and responsibilities in addressing the major health problem of obesity, focused on issues related to promoting better consumer dietary and lifestyle choices that have the potential to significantly improve the health and well-being of Americans, and obtained stakeholder views on how best to build a framework for messages to consumers about reducing obesity and achieving better nutrition. The science-based public workshop, which was co-sponsored and funded by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, collected data relevant to FDA efforts to help consumer make better-informed weight management decisions. In addition, some members of the OWG met with representatives from various sectors of the packaged food and restaurant industries.
To accomplish its work, the OWG organized several subgroups (i.e., messages, education, food label, restaurants/industry, therapeutics, research, and stakeholder investment), each designed to focus on a particular aspect of the original charge to prepare a report that outlines an action plan to cover critical dimensions of the obesity problem from FDA's perspective and authorities. In addition, in order to inform its work, the OWG created a knowledge base subgroup. All the subgroups, in turn, met separately and developed respective analyses and recommendations, which serve as the basis for this report.
The report that follows provides, for your consideration, a range of short- and long-term recommendations that are responsive to the charge. The OWG believes that, if the report's recommendations are implemented, they will make a worthy contribution to confronting our Nation's obesity epidemic and helping consumers lead healthier lives through better nutrition. The report also contains a number of appendices, including your original charge memo, the list of OWG members and subgroups, and other supporting material.
We appreciate the opportunity to have served FDA as leaders of the OWG, and we stand ready to facilitate the implementation of the OWG's recommendations.
Lester M. Crawford, D.V.M., Ph.D. Chair Deputy Commissioner of Food and Drugs |
Robert E. Brackett, Ph.D. Vice Chair Director Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition |
Obesity is a pervasive public health problem in the United States. Since the
late 1980s, adult obesity has steadily and substantially increased in the
United States. Today, 64 percent of all Americans are overweight and over
30 percent are obese; in 1988 through 1992, fewer than 56 percent were overweight
and fewer than 23 percent of American adults were obese. The trends for children
are even more worrisome. Recent research by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention(1) (CDC) shows that 15 percent of children and adolescents
aged 6 to 19 are overweight -double the rate of two decades ago (CDC,
2003). As Americans get heavier, their health suffers. Overweight and obesity
increase the risk for coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain
cancers. According to some estimates, at least 400,000 deaths each year may
be attributed to obesity (Mokdad, et al., 2004).
To help confront the problem of obesity in the United States and to help consumers lead healthier lives through better nutrition, on August 11, 2003, Mark B. McClellan, M.D., Ph.D., Commissioner of Food and Drugs, created the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Obesity Working Group (OWG). He charged the OWG to prepare a report that outlines an action plan to cover critical dimensions of the obesity problem from FDA's perspective and authorities.
This report reflects the work of the OWG to meet the Commissioner's charge and is organized largely around the specific elements of the August 11, 2003, charge.
The problem of obesity has no single cause. Rather, it is the result of numerous factors acting together over time. Similarly, there will be no single solution; obesity will be brought under control only as a result of numerous coordinated, complementary efforts from a variety of sectors of society. Nor can this problem be solved quickly. Any long-lasting reversal of this phenomenon will itself be a long-term process.
The OWG's recommendations are centered on the scientific fact that weight control is primarily a function of balance of the calories eaten and calories expended on physical and metabolic activity (see Appendix B Text Boxes in the report for a fuller discussion). The recommendations contained in this report therefore focus on a "calories count" emphasis for FDA actions. The box on the next page contains the OWG's principal recommendations. The body of this report details the underlying rationale for each of these principal recommendations and additional recommendations. Taken together, they represent a plan of action, founded on science, FDA's public health mission and legal authorities, and the importance of considering consumer and other stakeholder views and needs in addressing obesity.
(1) See Appendix A for a list of acronyms and abbreviations used throughout this report.