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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=90TT1306>
<title>
May 21, 1990: Bringing Sanity To The Diet Craze
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush's Bad Cop
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEALTH, Page 74
Bringing Sanity to the Diet Craze
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The Government considers tough new rules for weight-loss firms
</p>
<p>By Julie Johnson
</p>
<p> Despite its obsession with dieting, the U.S. population
seems to grow fatter every year. And so does the industry
tailored to respond to the needs and neuroses of those who are
fighting, and largely failing, to keep their waistlines under
control. Americans spent more than $30 billion last year on
such offerings as diet books, videotapes, appetite
suppressants, "lite" foods, low-calorie beverages and
commercial weight-loss programs. Now the overweight and
overwrought are rushing to try the latest raft of crash-diet
plans, which promote ways to trim fat quickly by doing little
more than taking pills or swilling specially formulated drinks.
</p>
<p> But the behemoth diet industry may be throwing too much
weight around. Critics say some companies use misleading
promotional campaigns and promise more than the programs can
deliver. Moreover, the safety of at least a few of the plans
has been called into question. Congress is holding hearings to
determine whether the diet industry should be more tightly
regulated, and various Government agencies are studying ways
to get tough on questionable practices in the business.
</p>
<p> Leading the congressional probe is Representative Ron Wyden,
an Oregon Democrat, who last week called diet-industry
executives before his House Small Business Subcommittee and
asked them to explain their hard-sell tactics. Wyden's staff
raised several concerns about specific companies. For example,
the Diet Center programs, which offer special foods and pills,
claim to provide guidance by "weight-loss professionals."
Customers may presume that these professionals are
nutritionists, says Wyden, but they are "basically
salespersons." Ads for the Physicians Weight Loss Centers imply
that a doctor will supervise each patient's diet, but
frequently the lone staff physician spends just one night a
week at the center.
</p>
<p> Most companies make losing weight sound much simpler than
it is. The Physicians Weight Loss Centers often tells newcomers
they can drop up to 7 lbs. in the first week, but the firm's
president, Charles Sekeres, admitted to Wyden's committee that
this range was based only on individuals who are "morbidly
obese" or on men (who can slim down more quickly than women).
In addition, ads for most weight-loss programs fail to mention
that many customers regain weight just as fast as they lose it
if they return to their old eating habits. The industry,
contends Wyden, focuses "more on quick profits than on
responsible weight loss you can really keep off."
</p>
<p> Those profits could be threatened by doubts about the safety
of some of the new diets. Nineteen former clients of
Nutri/System, a program that sells its own low-fat food, have
filed suit against the company, charging that they suffered
severe gallbladder problems. At last week's hearing,
Nutri/System president Donald McCulloch denied the allegations.
"No scientific study," he said, "demonstrates that the
Nutri/System program increases the risk of gallstones."
</p>
<p> Some diet-company executives conceded to the House
subcommittee that parts of the industry have been too zealous.
Chief executive Charles Berger of Weight Watchers, an H.J.
Heinz subsidiary that takes a moderate approach to weight loss,
likened the diet business to Wall Street in the 1980s. "Without
touching on the issue of greed," he said, "some companies in
our field have overpromised quick weight loss. And the promises
have grown increasingly excessive." Others doubt that an
industry with so many players can effectively police itself.
Ronald Stern, president of the nutrition division at Slim-Fast,
a firm that sells liquid-diet products over the counter,
asserted that "companies are moving to do things properly, but
the industry can only do so much. If there are regulations, we
will welcome them."
</p>
<p> The Government already has the power to crack down on the
diet industry through the federal truth-in-advertising and
mail-fraud laws. But these weapons have generally been used
just against products that are truly outrageous. The Postal
Service, for example, took action against diet sunglasses,
which supposedly altered food color and made meals appear less
appetizing, and a satin headband designed to emit
electromagnetic waves that, according to the manufacturer's
claims, help customers refuse to eat calorie-laden foods.
</p>
<p> The Federal Trade Commission, which regulates advertising,
has started to pay a bit more attention to the diet business.
After having filed a mere 13 lawsuits against the industry in
the entire decade of the '80s, the FTC has brought three cases
this year. One action involved a diet pill that when swallowed,
according to the ads, would break "into thousands of particles,
each acting like a tiny magnet." Fat cells would allegedly be
attracted to the "magnets" and eliminated through the digestive
system. In addition to going after such obvious frauds, the FTC
has initiated a broad investigation of diet-clinic advertising.
</p>
<p> Since many of the diet products are foods or drugs, the Food
and Drug Administration is a logical candidate to take the lead
in overseeing the industry, but the agency has been
dillydallying on this issue for years. As long ago as 1982, the
FDA began drafting regulations to cover over-the-counter
weight-loss products, and those proposals may at last be
finalized before the end of the year. The new rules are
expected to outlaw more than 100 diet-product ingredients on
the market, including methyl cellulose and other bulking agents
that supposedly "swell" in the consumer's stomach and curb
appetite.
</p>
<p> More important, the FDA is embarking on an overhaul of
labeling requirements for processed foods. That effort should
most definitely include the products of diet programs. Even
industry executives agree there should be uniform rules
governing what claims can be made and what caveats must be
listed. If consumers have more information, they will be in a
better position to decide which diet plans are worth the money.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>