Trump CDC Nominee; Ob-Gyn Who Took Coke Money For Obesity Program That Didn't Mention Sugar
When she was health commissioner of Georgia, the state with one of the highest rates of child obesity, Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald faced two enormous challenges: How to get children to slim down and how to pay for it. Her answer to the first was Power Up for 30, a program pushing schools to give children 30 minutes more exercise each day, part of a statewide initiative called Georgia Shape. The answer to the second was Coca-Cola, the soft drink company and philanthropic powerhouse, which has paid for almost the entire Power Up program.
Dr. Fitzgerald is now in the spotlight as the Trump administrations newly appointed director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, making her one of the nations top public health officials. And she finds herself facing a backlash from public health advocates for having accepted $1 million to fight child obesity from a company experts say is a major cause of it.
Her new position puts her at the helm of a federal agency that shook off its ties to the soda giant, in 2013, after concluding Cokes mission was at odds with its own. But Dr. Fitzgerald suggested in an email response to questions from The New York Times this past week that she would consider accepting Coke money for C.D.C. programs and would evaluate any proposal through the agencys standard review process.
Georgia Shape was established by Gov. Nathan Deal in 2011, after the legislature called for a statewide school fitness program, and was run by Dr. Fitzgerald. In 2013, Dr. Fitzgerald started Power Up for 30 with a million-dollar contribution from Coke. The money amounted to most of the programs $1.2 million budget over the past four years. Coke which, like the C.D.C., is based in Atlanta has also had two employees on Georgia Shapes advisory board, in various years. One was Rhona S. Applebaum, Cokes chief science and health officer. She left the company in 2016 after The Times reported that she had helped orchestrate a strategy of funding scientists who encouraged the public to focus on exercise and worry less about how calories contribute to obesity.
EDIT
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/22/health/brenda-fitzgerald-cdc-coke.html