Ethics
Transcription
Ethics
Ethics and Health Food Innovation Theo Ockhuizen Theo Ockhuizen, PhD Central theme Ethical issues in consumer communication as a Health Food Innovation manager Purpose of the lecture To recognize the issues at stake 2 Food & Ethics? “Erst kommt das Fressen, dann die Moral.“ Bertold Brecht “Consumeren is een morele daad” Cees Veerman, 2003 According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 3 Facts and evaluation How it is How it ought to be Empirical question: Normative question: Is a specific food pattern contributing to public and/or individual health? Do you need to improve public and individual health (with a healthy dietary pattern)? The answer to this questions does not imply the need to improve the dietary pattern. According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 4 Health food innovation is more that just facts The questions: “Why bother on food intake data and food patterns and why is this knowledge of relevance? “What’s our goal with the new gained knowledge on the relationship of nutrition and health?” “To what extend can nutritionists be held responsible and when are you asking to much?” According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 The answers: Not only knowledge but also a science-based evaluation. Not only understanding but also a vision on the value of health. Not only competence but also a vision and professional responsibility. 5 Ethics How the world operates How we ought to deal with people, our environment and eventually with the earth. According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 6 Ethics Ethics Ethics is a systematic reflection on moral issues. Morals “A universal and essential set of norms and values for a person or a group of persons as a directive for their behaviour”. Van der Burg 1994 According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 7 Norms: Norms are a set of concrete rules which direct our way of doing. Norms form a designated standard of average performance of (a group of) people of a given age, background, etc. Values: Values can be defined as broad preferences concerning appropriate courses of action or outcomes. As such, values reflect a person’s sense of right and wrong. Values are an integral part of every culture. With worldview and personality, they generate behavior. Values tell people what is good, beneficial, important, useful, beautiful, desirable, constructive...etc. According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 8 Health Food Innovation and ethics (1) Health food innovation needs a set of norms and values in research, application and consumer communication. ? Always Ethics According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 9 Health Food Innovation and ethics (2) When? 1. Health food innovation is a multidisciplinary science and requires during the innovation process always a moment of evaluation, but not necessarily an ethical evaluation. 2. An ethical evaluation is a systematic reflection on norms and values which direct our ways of conduct and behavior. 3. A reflection is indicated when the answers to our issues are not consistent and clear: “We have a moral problem” According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 10 Health Food Innovation and ethics (3) We do have a moral problem if: there is a shift in values, • Als er een waardenverschuiving is values are contradicting/conflicting, there is new situation, the consequences of a (set of) norms are unclear. According to Franck Meijboom, 2010 11 How is health defined now: Nutrition improving Health as Performance Freedom from disease Biomarkers are indicators of disease We want health and true prevention Health in future will be Optimal Metabolism Foods and Ingredients that improve overall metabolic efficiency Provide or Enhance active protection 12 Consumer needs Personal & social needs Achieve more enhanced physical health mental performance Body shape fit & active; youthful weight management Sense of well-being balance no stress; mood; sleep 13 Change in consumer needs Market opportunity What nutrition information can be used? How to use it? 14 To use or not to use? That’s the question Accepted body of knowledge low New knowledge from research high Risk continuum 15 Factors influencing the risk continuum Customer trust Credibility low Ethical issues high Risk continuum 16 Customer trust – key aspect of customer relationship Credibility – of industry and organisation Ethical issue – can nutrition/health advice to consumers be defended and justified? 17 New nutrition news can be used New nutrition news can be used BUT care is needed because of risks BUT robust research is needed for defending statements Competitive advantage can be achieved BUT marketers should work closely with nutritionists in deciding what to use 18 Health is an important selling item Health delivers a competitive advantage A competitive advantage thrills marketers 19 Most health claims are suggestive and misleading and lack proper scientific justification. Internally most often there is a difference of opinion between marketers and nuritionists. The marketer is commercially oriented, whereas the opinion of the nutritionist must be evidence based. MARKETERS NUTRITIONISTS Clear statements No absolute truth Need for new features High risk for changing views Need for short term results Consistancy in message 20 Misleading Forbiden by court Soya is free of cholesterol by nature 21 Misleading 22 Misleading Scientific proof? 23 Misleading 24 Wrap up Health food innovation is more that just facts: An ethical evaluation is a systematic reflection on norms and values Norms are a set of concrete rules which direct our way of doing. Values are broad preferences concerning appropriate courses of action or outcomes. We have moral problems if norms and values are contrading and/or conflicting: Not only knowledge but also a science-based evaluation. Not only understanding but also a vision on the value of health. Not only competence but also a vision and professional responsibility. Internally most often there is a difference of opinion between marketers and nutritionists. Advertisement should be fair. The upcoming EU regulation is expected to clear the arena from cowboys. 25 Thank you for your attention Theo Ockhuizen