Michael F. Jacobson
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Michael F. Jacobson | |
|---|---|
| Born | Michael Faraday Jacobson July 29, 1943 |
| Alma mater | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
| Occupation | Nutritionist |
| Notable work | Center for Science in the Public Interest |
Michael Faraday Jacobson (born July 29, 1943)[2] is an American scientist and nutrition advocate. He holds a Ph.D. in microbiology from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Jacobson co-founded the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) in 1971, along with two fellow scientists (James B. Sullivan, Albert J. Fritsch) he met while working at the Center for the Study of Responsive Law in Washington, DC. When his colleagues left CSPI in 1977, Jacobson became its executive director. In 2017 he stepped down (and was replaced by Peter Lurie) and held the position of Senior Scientist. He remained on the board of directors of the organization until 2022.[3] He has been a national leader in the movement for healthier diets, focusing both on education and obtaining laws and regulations. It was Jacobson who coined the now widely used phrases "junk food"[4] and "food porn".[5] In 2022 Jacobson founded the National Food Museum.[6]
Jacobson attended University of Chicago where he obtained a B.A. in 1965.[1] He studied at University of California, San Diego from 1965 to 1967 and obtained his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1969.[1]
Activism and views
Jacobson and his organization have both publicized healthy diets and criticized a wide variety of foods and beverages as unhealthy. He and CSPI frequently use unusual terms to emphasize their opposition to certain foods, for instance referring to Fettuccine Alfredo as a "heart attack on a plate".[7] In addition to publicizing concerns about or praise for foods, Jacobson lobbied for improvements in government (U.S. Food and Drug Administration and U.S. Department of Agriculture) regulations and guidelines and for new legislation.
He founded Food Day,[8] a nationwide celebration of healthy, affordable, and sustainable food and a grassroots campaign for change in food policies. Food Day was celebrated annually from 1975 to 1977 and from 2011 to 2015. Jacobson also founded Big Business Day[9] and the Center for the Study of Commercialism.[10]
In 2022, after he resigned from CSPI's board of directors and his position as senior scientist, Jacobson founded the National Food Museum. That nascent institution "explores food in all its dimensions".[6] The museum's exhibits and other activities will focus on the history of the human and American diets, food marketing, ethnic cuisines, farm animal welfare, and, especially, the impact of food and farming on health and the environment.
Junk food
Jacobson has campaigned against excessive consumption of junk food, including sweetened beverages. He has commented that "Soda is the quintessential junk food—just sugar calories and no nutrients" and has stated that the "average teenage boy is consuming two cans of soda pop a day".[11] Jacobson proposes several warning labels, including "Drinking (non-diet) soft drinks contributes to obesity and tooth decay," and "Consider switching to diet soda, water, or skim milk." He has referred to obesity as "an epidemic" during a CBS interview
In 2005, Jacobson's organization proposed mandatory warning labels on all containers of sugar-sweetened soft drinks, to warn consumers about the possible health risks of consuming these beverages on a regular basis.[12]
Jacobson advocates higher taxes on unhealthy foods, greater use of warning labels on food and beverage packaging, restrictions on advertising and selling junk foods ("snack foods"), and lawsuits against food producers and retailers whose practices he believes are detrimental to public health. His publicity campaigns and legal actions regarding un healthy ingredients such as:urethane in alcoholic beverages, sulfite preservatives in fresh vegetables, wine, and other foods; sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite in bacon and other processed meats; olestra; and acrylamide in baked and fried foods led to governmental restrictions or voluntary actions to reduce or eliminate those substances. Jacobson led the effort to get "Added Sugars" listed on Nutrition Facts labels.[13]
Trans fat
Beginning in 1993, Jacobson spearheaded efforts to require that artificial trans fat be labelled on food packages.[14] As evidence of trans fat's harmfulness accumulated, in 2004 CSPI petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to ban the use of partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, the source of artificial trans fat. The FDA banned that oil in 2015, with June 18, 2018, being the effective date to stop using it.[15]
Plant-based diet
In 2006, Jacobson and staff from the CSPI authored Six Arguments for a Greener Diet: How a More Plant-Based Diet Could Save Your Health and the Environment.[16][17] The book critically examines the environmental, health and animal welfare consequences of animal source foods. The book suggests for people to adopt a plant-based diet such as the DASH diet or Mediterranean diet and eat more fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, healthy oils with modest amounts of fish and some low-fat dairy products.[17] A review stated that "Jacobson's book presents a well-researched case for Americans to pursue a diet embracing increased plant intake and decreased consumption of factory-farmed meat".[16] The book has been published online at the CSPI website.[18]
Sodium
He has led campaigns to reduce the sodium content of processed foods, such as soups, snack foods, and processed meats. Excess consumption of sodium increases the risk of high blood pressure, heart attacks, and strokes. In addition to publishing several books and reports, CSPI's work led to the FDA's issuing voluntary sodium-reduction guidelines in October 2021.
Jacobson stepped down as executive director of CSPI in October 2017 and then, as a senior scientist at CSPI, published Salt Wars: The Battle Over the Biggest Killer in the American Diet..[19] That book addresses the scientific controversy about the health impact of lowering sodium consumption, industry opposition to government action to lower sodium, and advice to consumers.
Criticism
Due to his public-interest approach and in part to his criticisms of the food industry, Jacobson's methods have been questioned by the libertarian community, with the Center for Consumer Freedom awarding him "nanny of the year" on three occasions.[20] Some argue that parents have control over their children's diet and can moderate their intake of sugar-sweetened soft drinks. However, Jacobson contends that "kids know about vending machines, and they can go to 7-Eleven and get a Big Gulp which contains half a gallon (0.5 US gal (1,900 ml))—a thousand calories, almost!—of soda pop in a single serving... We've come a long way from the six-and-a-half ounce (6.5 US fluid ounces (190 ml)) Coke bottles some 50 years ago."[21]