Diabetic friendly essentials
Here are advertisements of essential nutritional
supplements for diabetics and article on Companies may have to
back advertisement claims with proof along with the article on Diabetes
published today on 14.07.12 in the Times of India, Ahmedabad Edition.
Companies
may have to back ad claims with proof
New Delhi: Companies that promise that their brand of cereals helps in losing weight or their massage oil gives instant relief from that knee pain may soon have to back their claims with stronger evidence to continue with such claims in their ads, or face action in court.
Here are advertisements of essential nutritional
supplements for diabetics and article on Companies may have to
back advertisement claims with proof along with the article on Diabetes
published today on 14.07.12 in the Times of India, Ahmedabad Edition.
Abstract of article on Diabetes:
It has been estimated that Diabetes, which is one of the
most prevalent non communicable diseases in India had witnessed a steady
increase over the last decade due to the economic transition and increased
changes in lifestyle. Healthy lifestyle with regular exercise can help you stay
hale and hearty, say experts.
From the website of www.uthhealth.com
Diabetic Care:
Diabetes
is a chronic disease, which occurs when the pancreas does not produce enough
insulin, or when the body cannot effectively use the insulin it produces. This
leads to an increased concentration of glucose in the blood (hyperglycaemia).
Type 1 diabetes (previously known as
insulin-dependent or childhood-onset diabetes) is characterized by a lack of
insulin production.
Type 2 diabetes (formerly called non-insulin-dependent or adult-onset diabetes)
is caused by the body’s ineffective use of insulin. It often results from
excess body weight and physical inactivity.
Gestational diabetes is hyperglycaemia that is first recognized
during pregnancy.
IDF, which tracks the global spread of this scourge, says that by
next year, the country will be home to 50.8 million diabetics, making it the
world's unchallenged diabetes capital. And the number is expected to go up to a
whopping 87 million -- 8.4% of the country's adult population -- by 2030.
The report points out another interesting trend -- women are the
worst affected by this disease. In 2010, one million more women than men have
diabetes (143 million women as against 142 million men). The difference is
expected to increase to six million by 2030 (222 million women against 216
million men).
Diabetes prevention is as basic as eating more
healthfully, becoming more physically active and losing a few extra pounds —
and it's never too late to start. Making a few simple changes in your lifestyle
now may help you avoid the serious health complications of diabetes down the
road, such as nerve, kidney and heart damage.
Here is an article from Dipti Jain |
TNN published in TOI, 14.07.12
Companies
may have to back ad claims with proof
New Delhi: Companies that promise that their brand of cereals helps in losing weight or their massage oil gives instant relief from that knee pain may soon have to back their claims with stronger evidence to continue with such claims in their ads, or face action in court.
In a bid to protect consumer interest, the consumer affairs
ministry has recommended that the government set up an investigative agency
that will collect data on claims by companies and advertisers to ensure that
they are scientific and not without any basis. The move follows consultations
with the health ministry, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India
(FSSAI) and Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) over the last
three-four months. Various stakeholders have also suggested that the Centre and
state governments also file cases before the consumer courts against companies
that make misleading claims.
“To ensure that there is complete transparency and to avoid any
moral hazard, we have recommended the creation of some sort of an investigative
agency. This wing should be attached to our ministry,” a senior official in the
consumer affairs department told TOI. The ministry has also sought that a panel
of lawyers should be constituted so that appropriate action be taken. And these
lawyers will have to be present in the investigative agency, not in a separate
panel.
While companies refused to comment, officials said the matter has
been discussed with industry representatives and it has not found “full
support” as they believe the move will kill creativity. “All companies in any
sector, be it financial institutions or FMCG, will come under the ambit,” the
official said.
Even as self-regulatory advertising body ASCI is authorized to check misleading claims, the government believes there is a need for a stronger body to ensure stringent action is taken. “We are not against self regulation, but this is not the right attitude,” the official added.
Even as self-regulatory advertising body ASCI is authorized to check misleading claims, the government believes there is a need for a stronger body to ensure stringent action is taken. “We are not against self regulation, but this is not the right attitude,” the official added.
FSSAI, which is mandated to take action against misleading claims
in the food sector, said there was still some clarity needed if the food sector
comes under the ambit. The organization has recommended the strengthening of
the existing mechanism instead of constituting a separate body. “We are just
worried that a toothless body like the existing one might be constituted again.
Companies say they are already providing evidence. But we have recommended for
empowering the legal mechanism under the consumer protection act,” an FSSAI
official said.
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