Andrew von Eschenbach

The
Although his career has been focused on curing disease, von Eschenbach has a unique opportunity to prevent disease by bolstering the long-neglected food side of the agency. Americans spend $30 billion a year for drugs to treat hypertension and heart disease, and obesity costs the nation $100 billion more. Yet apart from occasionally updating food labels, the FDA does almost nothing to improve our diet. (Just helping Americans halve their salt consumption and banning partially hydrogenated vegetable oil could save 100,000 lives a year.) If von Eschenbach spends as much energy on foods as he is expected to spend on drugs, he could make a signal contribution to the public's health.
Jacobson is executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest
Next: Jimmy Wales >>
Most Popular »
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- Schwarzenegger's Failure in California
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- Searching for Palin's 'Hot Photos'
- Michael Jackson Gets His Requiem
- Director Sydney Pollack Dies
- What Happened to the Stimulus?
- Where Palin Made Her Name
- Can the U.S. Afford to Let California Fail?
- Behind North Korea's Missile Launch
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- Schwarzenegger's Failure in California
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- Can the U.S. Afford to Let California Fail?
- The Legacy of Proposition 13
- What Happened to the Stimulus?
- California's Budget Crisis: Is There a Way Out?
- In Peru Sports, Men Bumble, And Women Shine
- How California's Fiscal Woes Began: A Crisis 30 Years in the Making
- Why Marriage Matters







RSS