
California Bans Trans Fats in Restaurants
California has passed a law banning trans fats in restaurants, bakeries, delicatessens, cafeterias, and other businesses classified as “food facilities.”
The July 26 edition of the
The
Cardiologist Wes Fisher, MD, offers a contrarian take on the whole matter at his
Is the inimitable Dr. Wes on to something? Would it be medically advisable to somehow ban high-carb foods? Would such a move even be feasible? The outcry from the nation’s fast food retailers (not to mention many of their customers) would be deafening. As pointed out in the NYT article, the main opposition to California’s trans fat ban has come from the California Restaurant Association (CRA), which the article said has “argued that singling out trans fats as a singularly harmful food product was arbitrary and that a mandate would prove expensive.”
In a bid for “disingenuous PR justification of the year,” a CRA representative interviewed for the article reassured readers that the CRA does not doubt the health findings surrounding trans fats, noting instead that the association opposes the ban on “philosophical” grounds, because singling out only one product “isn’t necessarily the right solution.”
Is California’s approach a harbinger of things to come? Can we legislate and mandate our way to improved national cardiovascular health? The NYT article likens the growing animus toward trans fats and other heart-unhealthy foods to the organized public health campaigns against cigarettes and tobacco. If the dangers to public health posed by trans fats can provoke such far-reaching legislation, can we expect similar prohibitions to be placed on other products (high-fructose corn syrup, artificial coloring, etc) if the evidence marshaled against them is convincing enough? Finally, what is the proper role of the state in making health choices for citizens (or, more properly, removing those choices entirely)?



























































