| Literature DB >> 35623376 |
Jennifer Lacy-Nichols1, Robert Marten2, Eric Crosbie3, Rob Moodie4.
Abstract
Many commercial actors use a range of coordinated and sophisticated strategies to protect business interests-their corporate playbook-but many of these strategies come at the expense of public health. To counter this corporate playbook and advance health and wellbeing, public health actors need to develop, refine, and modernise their own set of strategies, to create a public health playbook. In this Viewpoint, we seek to consolidate thinking around how public health can counter and proactively minimise powerful commercial influences. We propose an initial eight strategies for this public health playbook: expand public health training and coalitions, increase public sector resources, link with and learn from social movements to foster collective solidarity, protect public health advocates from industry threats, develop and implement rigorous conflict of interest safeguards, monitor and expose corporate activities, debunk corporate arguments, and leverage diverse commercial interests. This set of strategies seeks to amplify inherent assets of the public health community and create opportunities to explicitly counter the corporate playbook. These strategies are not exhaustive, and our aim is to provoke further discussion on and exploration of this topic. TRANSLATION: For the Spanish translation of this paper see Supplementary Materials section.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35623376 PMCID: PMC9197808 DOI: 10.1016/S2214-109X(22)00185-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Glob Health ISSN: 2214-109X Impact factor: 38.927
Methods employed by the corporate playbook
| Intimidate and vilify critics | Use smear tactics, intimidation, and lawsuits (or threats of) against industry critics, such as scientists, academics, health practitioners, advocates, and civil society groups | In Colombia and Mexico, proponents of a tax on sugary drinks received threatening phone calls and had their computers hacked |
| Attack and undermine legitimate science | Fund counter-studies, sponsor conferences, recruit corporate scientists, skew data, distort evidence, claim manipulation, exaggerate uncertainty, plant doubt, minimise the severity of the issue, insist the problem is very complex, and demand balance for both sides | Chemical company Monsanto deliberately blocked research that could show the toxicity of its product Roundup, and company employees were ghostwriters on supposedly independent research |
| Frame and reframe discussion and debate | Promote narratives of personal or individual responsibility, moderation, consumer freedoms, free markets, the nanny state, government intrusion, and businesses as part of the solution | The plastics industry coined the term litterbug and created a campaign focused on personal responsibility for waste to distract from proposed regulations of their production practices |
| Camouflage actions | Leverage front groups and pseudo civil-society groups to act as a mouthpiece for the industry, create the appearance of independence, and avoid bad publicity | Big Oil promotes itself as supportive of climate change policies yet spends millions on trade associations such as the American Petroleum Institute, which vigorously oppose regulation of fossil fuels |
| Influence the political process | Lobby, make political donations, recruit former politicians, and participate in policy development to influence, block, weaken, and delay policy and regulatory outcomes | Google has more than 258 instances of former government employees starting work in the private sector (and vice versa) in the USA, including individuals from the White House, the Department of Justice, and the Federal Trade Commission—the same agencies tasked with investigating antitrust |
| Develop corporate alternatives to policies | Create voluntary self-regulation, codes, and commitments to delay or pre-empt public health interventions | In response to concerns about Meta's promotion of hate speech and inciting violence, the company has developed an internal oversight board, which is criticised for its lack of independence and mandate |
| Deploy corporate social responsibility and partnerships | Donate to community groups, sports, entertainment, and non-governmental organisations, and develop public–private partnerships with governments and credible organisations to foster corporate goodwill and distract and deflect from harmful products or behaviour | Consultancy firms such as KPMG portray themselves as giving back to society—meanwhile the company has helped tobacco companies to develop their own, misleading corporate social responsibility campaigns |
| Regulation and policy avoidance and evasion | Impede the implementation of policies through legal challenges in national and international courts, alongside use of legal loopholes, tax avoidance, corporate restructuring, and violation of laws, treaties, and codes | Philip Morris International unsuccessfully sued the Australian and Uruguayan Governments to block implementation of their laws requiring plain packaging and warning labels on tobacco products |
Synthesised from the following sources: Wiist, Brownell and Warner, Freudenberg, Oreskes and Conway, and Moodie.