The Witness

Big food companies are funding health research in South Africa

- SUSAN GOLDSTEIN, MARK TOMLINSON, RACHEL WYNBERG and TANYA DOHERTY

In 2021, the director of the African Research University Alliance Centre of Excellence in Food Security at the University of Pretoria was appointed to the board of the transnatio­nal food corporatio­n Nestlé.

At the time, a group of more than 200 senior academics wrote an open letter about conflicts of interest.

Nestlé’s portfolio of foods, by its own admission, includes more than 60% that don’t meet the definition of healthy products.

In December last year, the same centre announced it had signed a memorandum of understand­ing with Nestlé. It signalled an intent to “forge a transforma­tive partnershi­p” to shape “the future of food and nutrition research and education” and transform “Africa’s food systems”.

This is not an isolated case. Across African universiti­es, companies with products that are harmful to health fund health-related research and education. Nestlé, for example, “shares expertise” with “eight universiti­es in Africa”.

Activities funded under agreements with universiti­es include internship­s, seminars and training programmes, as well as sponsorshi­ps for graduate research students.

In South Africa, Nestlé has funded a prize in paediatric­s for final year medical students at the University of the Witwatersr­and. It also funds a two-year paediatric gastroente­rology fellowship at Stellenbos­ch University.

BIAS, EVEN IF IT’S UNCONSCIOU­S

Financial links between corporatio­ns and academic institutio­ns are well known to lead to conflicts of interest.

A 2017 paper, “Industry sponsorshi­p and Research Outcome”, found that “industry funding leads researcher­s to favour corporatio­ns either consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly”.

Those advising government­s and charities on dietary policy warn how “current or past financial or personal associatio­ns with interested parties make it difficult to distinguis­h subtle, unconsciou­s bias from deliberate­ly concealed impropriet­y”.

Other research found that of 168 industry-funded studies, 156 (93%) showed biased results, all in favour of industry sponsors. In 2018, around 13% of research articles published in the top 10 most-cited nutrition journals were backed by and favourable to the food industry. Such backing is often hidden.

A GROWING PROBLEM

The world is facing a pandemic of non-communicab­le diseases — hypertensi­on, diabetes, cardiovasc­ular diseases, cancer — all linked to the consequenc­es of poor nutrition such as stunting and obesity.

A 2023 Lancet commission reports that “just four industry sectors already account for at least a third of global deaths”, one of which is unhealthy food. These four industry sectors are expanding their markets in Africa and elsewhere in the Global South where inadequate regulation of the sale and marketing of unhealthy foods, drinks, alcohol, tobacco and agrichemic­al products provides opportunit­ies for exploitati­on.

WHERE THERE’S SMOKE …

The most well-known commercial products that harm health are tobacco-related, which are now widely regulated to decrease harm.

The tobacco industry used many tactics to prevent its regulation. It funded research and whole institutio­ns to produce “evidence” to support the industry or sow doubt about the harmful impacts of tobacco.

In 2019, public health academics at the University of Cape Town discovered that the psychiatry department had accepted funding from the Philip

Morris Foundation for a Smoke-Free World. The department subsequent­ly cancelled the contract. This followed outrage from the broader university community. In 2020, the UCT council adopted a policy disallowin­g any employee from accepting funding from the tobacco industry.

In another example, scientific research published in 1967 implicated saturated fat as the main cause of heart disease. In so doing it downplayed the role of sugar. It took over 40 years to uncover that this research was paid for by the sugar industry.

The decline in research funding in South Africa means that academics need to be especially vigilant. We need to protect our higher education institutio­ns from research bias.

It is not enough to simply declare these interests and assume that this will eliminate the conflict of interest.

Instead, public health academics need to develop much more robust systems to manage conflicts of interest at all levels of academia.

Governance structures at universiti­es need mechanisms to respond to initiative­s which run counter to public health. The Department of Paediatric­s and Child Health at the University of Cape Town has called for the end to sponsorshi­p by infant formula milk companies for education, research or policy developmen­t.

Universiti­es need to be alert to the dangers of these “gift relationsh­ips” and be better equipped to protect their integrity.

· Susan Goldstein is an associate professor in the SAMRC Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science, University of the Witwatersr­and. Mark Tomlinson is professor in the Department of Global Health at Stellenbos­ch University. Rachel Wynberg is a professor and DST/NRF Bio-economy Chair at the University of Cape Town. Tanya Doherty is a professor and chief specialist scientist at the SA Medical Research Council.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa