Waterloo Region Record

Critics unhappy that Goop is making a push into Canada

- ADINA BRESGE

Gwyneth Paltrow-backed lifestyles brand Goop is making a push into Canada, but critics in the medical community say they’re ready to push back.

Goop chief content officer Elise Loehnen announced Wednesday that the online wellness empire is bringing its series of In Goop Health conference­s to Canada for the first time this fall. Its e-commerce site will also expand the selection of products available to Canadians.

Loehnen, who will host the wellness summit in Vancouver on Oct. 27, said the daylong symposium will be more intimate and less “intense” than previous gatherings in the U.S.

With tickets retailing at $400, the event at a “goopified” Stanley Park Pavilion is billed as a “mind-expanding day” featuring panels, wellness workshops and healthful eats prepared by Vancouver chefs.

“(Canadians) are sometimes even a little bit ahead of Goop in terms of where you are on the wellness spectrum, so it feels like a totally natural brand affinity,” Loehnen said in a recent phone interview from Montreal.

But some of Goop’s most prominent Canadian skeptics disagree with that assessment.

“They’re in our backyard now,” said Timothy Caulfield, an Edmonton-based health science expert and author of “Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything: When Celebrity Culture and Science Clash.”

“As a scientific community, we have to start thinking of ways that we can use things like the Goop summit to talk about the science, to talk about what the evidence really says and what you really can do to live a healthy life.”

Goop’s expansion into Canada comes as the company adopts what Loehnen calls a more “buttoned-up” approach to factchecki­ng the informatio­n on its website in the face of mounting criticism from health experts who say it provides a platform to scientific­ally dubious informatio­n.

While many of Goop’s posts are devoted to travel tips and diet-friendly recipes, the brand has also promoted controvers­ial products and practices that critics say have no proven medical benefits, such as a vaginal steaming service that purportedl­y “cleanses your uterus,” according to the site.

Loehnen said Goop’s content is vetted by a lawyer and a team of scientists and doctors.

Goop is also bringing on a fact-checker to review and contextual­ize informatio­n on its website, she said, and working to assign clearer guide posts to help readers distinguis­h between claims grounded in modern science and those that are more “speculativ­e.”

But Caulfield said if the website was fact-checked to his standards, there would be little content left.

Loehnen said Goop’s mission is not to debunk establishe­d medical knowledge, but to explore the questions that “big pharma” has overlooked, particular­ly regarding maladies that primarily affect women.

Winnipeg-raised gynecologi­st and obstetrici­an Jennifer Gunter said the company has turned these holes in women’s health care into a business model based on the propagatio­n of medical “conspiracy theories.”

“I think that (Goop is) profiting off of the way that women have been ignored by medicine,” Gunter said in a phone interview from San Francisco, where she is now based. “No one who’s selling you products is asking questions.”

Gunter attended the In Goop Health conference in New York earlier this year and on her blog challenged many of the claims made by speakers there.

As Gunter sees it, Goop often blurs the line between things you do for happiness and healing, which she compared to the difference between getting a pedicure and seeing your doctor.

“Women do not benefit from lack of informatio­n, and you can only be empowered about your health if you’re informed about it,” she said. “Using smoke and mirrors to say things that make you happy make you healthier ... is not fair.”

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Gwyneth Paltrow

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